Wolfspeed’s Mohawk Valley Fab at the Marcy Nanocenter is the world’s first, largest, and only fully automated 200mm Silicon Carbide fabrication facility. With $2.5 billion in committed investment — including a $750 million CHIPS Act federal award secured in October 2024 — and 600+ jobs targeted by 2029, this is one of the most significant chip manufacturing investments in the country. Open roles include process engineering, cleanroom operations, equipment maintenance, materials science, and manufacturing leadership.
The math for technical talent: semiconductor careers at national-average wages, in a county where a three-bedroom house costs a fraction of what it does near comparable fabs in Phoenix, Raleigh, or Albany.
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Danfoss Power Solutions is returning to the Marcy Nanocenter — and bringing up to 300 new jobs with it. Announced in June 2026, Danfoss is establishing operations at the Quad-C facility at 330 Technology Drive, with phased production starting in early August 2026 and hiring beginning immediately.
The work is specific: manufacturing and warehousing for liquid cooling components used in data centers, the infrastructure that keeps AI and cloud systems running at scale. Danfoss previously operated in the region and is returning explicitly because of the Mohawk Valley’s combination of skilled workforce, available infrastructure, and the momentum of advanced manufacturing growth around the Marcy campus. The company expects to scale production through 2026 and into 2027.
Open roles span manufacturing operations, engineering, and warehouse logistics. This is active hiring, not a future announcement.
“The Mohawk Valley is a logical place to expand our data center business,” said Peter Bleday, VP of the Data Center business unit at Danfoss Power Solutions. “It offers a compelling combination of talent, infrastructure, and strategic access that supports our ambitious growth plans.”
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A note on the Marcy Nanocenter: Wolfspeed and Danfoss are now both operating on the same 434-acre campus at Marcy, alongside SUNY Polytechnic Institute. The campus still has capacity for additional tenants. What is being built here — a concentration of semiconductor manufacturing, data center infrastructure, advanced materials, and technical training — is a genuine industrial cluster, not a single anchor employer. That matters for anyone evaluating career stability in the region.