The chances are that even when you reach for a humble paracetamol or tablet of ibuprofen it comes from a factory that uses machinery from pioneering company I Holland. The equipment even punches out sweets such as mints. These include a famous brand that the firm’s contract forbids it from revealing.
The Long Eaton engineering firm – based in Meadow Lane – is the world’s longest-established maker of “tablet compression tooling”. It was founded more than 75 years ago and has become a huge exporter – with overseas customers now accounting for 95 per cent of its business. During the pandemic it rushed to perfect tooling for the anti-COVID pill Paxlovid.
Because pharmaceutical giants require ultra-sterile equipment the company has been looking at new ways to keep machinery pristine. A £10,343 research and development grant from Erewash Borough Council has gone towards the project – using funding from the government. The company’s spokesman Dillan Gelder said: “Paracetamol, ibuprofen, mints, dishwasher tablets – we make bespoke tooling for so many products. In fact, we have more than 10,000 designs on record.
“I Holland is truly an example of quality British engineering – and the council is proud to play a part in what is a local success story dating back to 1946.
“The firm’s successful application to the council for a research and development grant will help to boost the local economy – which is what the government funding we have secured is designed to do.”
Two other companies have also won grants. Dales Fabrications Ltd, which makes aluminium building products, was awarded £17,025. The firm is based in Ilkeston – as is injection moulding specialist RA Labone Ltd, which got £12,812.
For more information about the grants check out R&D Grant Scheme Applicants Guide.
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