The exterior "skin" of the $1 billion Vikings stadium starts going up next month.
That reality had forklifts darting across Viracon's sprawling factory in Owatonna on a recent Thursday as workers hustled to finish the 10,000 or so glass panels needed to complete the facade.
The windows — each 5 feet by 9 feet — begin arriving at the stadium's downtown Minneapolis construction site in just two weeks. A 30-person crew from Plymouth-based InterClad will then start bolting the glass onto the stadium structure.
"The property should be fully enclosed by November," said Allen Troshinsky, vice president of operations for Mortenson Construction, the general contractor building the stadium.
"Everything is firing on all cylinders as far as the fabrication and imminent delivery of the glass. And that is important," he said. "It is occurring as it was originally scheduled more than a year ago. So are we happy? Absolutely. This is another milestone."
The fast-growing Viracon, whose parent company is Bloomington-based Apogee Enterprises Inc., is known for making the glass used in such behemoths as Taipei 101 and the One World Trade Center.
While the Vikings project will generate less than $5 million in revenue for the company, it is still a point of pride and "a nice, big, high-profile project and it's in our back yard," said Apogee CEO Joe Puishys. "We are proud that the architects chose to use our glass. Without question, it has added to our growth and our workforce increases here in Owatonna."
Viracon's annual revenue is on pace to grow 12 percent to $930 million for the fiscal 2015 year that ends in March. The company should reach $1 billion in sales for the first time next year, officials said.