Proven Industrial Process

Technology
& Production

TMHG implements proven fourth-generation shipbuilding methods refined over 15–20 years by the yards that now dominate global production — then advances them with modern technology on a greenfield foundation.

12 Production Halls
The Physical Scale of the Production Platform
Three primary assembly halls and nine construction halls — plus fifteen specialized shops and floating drydocks — operating simultaneously at full ramp.
Human + Machine
An Integrated Team at Every Function — Supply Chain to Delivery
Every function from supply chain to QA to final delivery has a human and machine component working in concert. No function is purely one or the other. Several thousand workers at full ramp.
Factory Runs on Data
Every Component Tracked From Digital Model to Finished Vessel
The digital twin is the master instruction set. Automated systems position, execute, and inspect against it. The MES/ERP connects every production element in a single operating environment.
Gen 4+
Proven for 15–20 Years — Built on Hardware That Didn’t Exist Then
The methodology is proven at scale in the world’s leading yards. TMHG implements it today on current-generation robotics, AI, and data infrastructure — not systems installed when those yards were commissioned.
Infrastructure

THE PHYSICAL PLATFORM

Primary Assembly Hall
1,250 × 500 ft
Largest assembly hall. Multiple vessels simultaneously. 120 ft freespan crane clearance.
Primary Assembly Halls
(2x) 750 × 300 ft
Multiple vessels per hall. Full overhead crane system.
Construction Halls
(9x) 300 × 100 ft
On-site component fabrication. Small vessel production. Feeds primary assembly halls.
Production Shops
(15x) 300 × 100 ft
Specialized fabrication, outfitting, and component preparation supporting all production lines.
Floating Drydocks
Among the Largest in the U.S.
Fixed in dedicated slips. Supports new construction launch and ship repair operations.
Resilience
150+ mph Hurricane Rated
Surge barrier. Facilities designed for Gulf Coast operating environment from the ground up.
Production Ramp How Does the Facility Reach Full Operation?
The Ramp Sequence

The facility does not come online all at once. Construction is phased, and production capacity comes online as each phase completes. The first vessels are delivered from the initial halls while subsequent phases are still under construction. Each phase builds on demonstrated execution from the one before it — expanding the number of active production lines, the complexity of vessels in the mix, and the overall throughput of the facility. At full operation, all twelve primary production halls run simultaneously.

What This Actually Is

A PLATFORM, NOT A FACTORY — BUILT TO PRODUCE ANY VESSEL FROM ITS DIGITAL TWIN

Fourth-generation shipbuilding — the production model that defines the world's most productive yards today — is characterized by block construction, automated assembly, and digital integration across the entire production system. It is not a new concept. It has been operating at full scale in Asia for 15–20 years. What TMHG brings is implementation on current-generation technology, purpose-built from scratch.

A dedicated assembly line produces one product. A production platform produces whatever the digital model specifies — a destroyer, a tanker, a frigate — simultaneously, in parallel.

Why It’s a Platform
Foundational Infrastructure for Any Vessel Type

A dedicated assembly line is hardwired for one product. This facility is not. The digital twin defines what each vessel is — and smart machines execute against that specific twin. A different vessel in the next slot means a different twin, not a different factory. The platform adapts to whatever needs to be built.

Parallel Production
Multiple Vessel Types, Multiple Stages, Simultaneously

A destroyer, a product tanker, and a logistics vessel can be in production simultaneously across the facility — each driven by its own digital twin, each at a different stage of completion. No vessel type gates another. The platform runs whatever mix of work produces the highest value.

What distinguishes a production platform from a purpose-built factory is adaptability at scale. A traditional assembly line is engineered to execute the same sequence of fixed steps for the same product — efficiently, but inflexibly. The intelligence is in the line itself, not in the machines. When the product changes, the line changes. In a Gen 4+ production platform, the intelligence is in the digital twin. The machines — welding systems, cutting systems, material handling, inspection arrays — are not executing fixed programs. They are reading the twin for that specific vessel and executing whatever that vessel requires at that stage. A different weld geometry, a different cut, a different fit — with every operation, because every twin is different. The result is a facility that can produce any vessel for which a digital twin exists, without retooling, without reconfiguring the line, without any structural change to the production system. That is what makes it a platform: it is foundational infrastructure, not a dedicated machine for one product.
Parallel production of different vessel types simultaneously is not an incidental capability — it is the operating model. At steady state, assembly halls contain multiple vessels at different stages of completion, potentially across different vessel classes. Components of each vessel are fabricated in the construction halls and shops against that vessel’s own twin, arriving at the primary halls pre-outfitted and sequenced for their position in the production flow. Each vessel slot operates on its own schedule, independent of the others. The facility sequences the highest value-density available work into every production window — which means the mix of vessels in the halls reflects commercial and defense demand simultaneously, not a single program’s production run.
Integrated Human + Machine Team
Every Function Has Both — From Supply Chain to Delivery

No function in this facility is purely human or purely machine. Supply chain tracking, production scheduling, execution, supervision, quality assurance, and delivery all involve an integrated human and machine component working in concert. Several thousand workers at full ramp — alongside the automated systems they work with.

Quality and Oversight
Continuous Human and Machine Verification at Every Stage

Sensor arrays continuously compare physical production against the digital twin and flag deviations for human action. Quality and safety personnel operate across all production lines. For government work, oversight and QA are not optional — the production system is designed around them, with human sign-off built into every critical stage.

The integrated human and machine team operates at every level of the production system — not just on the floor. In supply chain management, AI tracks thousands of components against production schedules and flags shortfalls; human procurement teams make sourcing decisions and manage supplier relationships. In scheduling, AI optimizes sequencing across hundreds of production stations; human production managers set priorities and resolve conflicts. On the floor, automated systems handle the high-repetition precision tasks — welding, cutting, material positioning — while skilled tradespeople perform block connections, systems integration, piping tie-ins, and the work that requires human dexterity and judgment in complex environments. In the control rooms, production teams supervise automated systems, coordinate material flow, manage quality gates, and respond to deviations flagged by the sensor network. At every level, human judgment and machine capability compound on each other. The facility at full ramp employs several thousand workers — performing skilled, high-value work that the automated systems cannot do alone.
Oversight and quality assurance are not constraints on the production system — they are built into its architecture. Sensor arrays continuously compare completed work against the digital twin’s specifications, flagging deviations immediately for human review and correction. Human quality personnel operate across all production lines, performing the inspections and sign-offs that the production system generates as checkpoints. For government and defense contracts, this QA infrastructure is not optional — it is a contractual requirement and a central design principle. The result is a production environment where quality is verified continuously, at machine speed, with human judgment applied at every gate that requires it. The combination produces higher conformance rates than either human inspection alone or automated inspection without human oversight — which is the point of the integrated model.
Production Architecture How Does Throughput Work at Scale?
The Production Architecture

At steady state, the facility operates multiple primary assembly halls simultaneously — each hall containing multiple vessels at different stages of completion. Components arrive from the staging yard at the rear of the hall. Vessels nearest to completion are sequenced closest to the hall exit. When a vessel reaches the point of hall exit — weather-tight, structurally complete — it moves to the open-air shipway and then to the floating drydock for final outfitting and launch. Component fabrication in the construction halls runs in parallel with final assembly.

The throughput advantage comes from parallel production across multiple halls and multiple vessel types simultaneously — eliminating idle time across the entire facility while maximizing the value density of every production slot.

Automation Technology

THE FACTORY BUILDS WHAT THE MODEL SPECIFIES

From digital model to finished vessel — every system coordinated from a single operational environment.

Digital Twin
The Master Instruction Set for the Factory

The digital twin is a complete 3D model of every component — assembled in build order, with full weld specifications — that serves as the master instruction set for the factory. Sensors position components per the twin. Automated systems execute per the twin’s spec. Sensors inspect and confirm acceptance. The factory recreates the twin in physical reality.

Modular Construction
Pre-Outfitted Components Assembled in Final Sequence

Components arrive at the assembly hall with electrical, plumbing, and mechanical systems pre-installed. Integration at the joins is a defined, repeatable operation — not ad hoc assembly. Pre-outfitting enables parallel fabrication and eliminates sequential staging delays.

The digital twin is the master specification from which the entire production process flows. Every component in every vessel is modeled in three dimensions to millimeter precision before any steel is cut. That model is not a reference document — it is the operating instruction set for the factory. Sensors cued from the twin guide components into their correct position. Automated welding systems address the work in alignment with the twin, then execute the action — a weld, a cut, a fit — according to the spec contained in the model. Trailing sensor arrays then inspect and confirm acceptance of the completed action against the twin’s requirements.

The process is bidirectional: physical reality feeds data back to the twin, updating it continuously as each operation is completed and verified. The result is a production flow where the factory starts with the digital model and systematically recreates it in steel, wiring, piping, and finished systems.
Modular construction is the production architecture that enables parallel throughput. Rather than building a ship sequentially from keel to deck, sections and components of every vessel are fabricated simultaneously — across on-site construction halls and shops, TMHG’s own fabrication capacity, and a supplier network — and then assembled in the primary halls in a continuous flow. Components arrive pre-outfitted: electrical runs, plumbing headers, mechanical systems, and structural framing installed before they reach the assembly hall. Integration at the joins is a defined, repeatable operation rather than ad hoc installation. This is what enables high throughput: not faster individual work, but parallel production of every element simultaneously.
Production Management Platform
One System of Record for the Entire Facility

Integrated manufacturing execution system (MES) and enterprise resource planning (ERP) coordinating production, quality control, scheduling, supply chain, and workforce. Design changes propagate automatically. Quality deviations trigger immediate correction.

Control Environment
Production Teams Directing Operations Across Every Hall

Each primary assembly hall has a glass-fronted control mezzanine running its full length. Separate teams manage each vessel slot independently. A higher-level coordination function oversees shared resources, material flow, and hall-wide operations — layered oversight at every scale.

Sensor Networks
Real-Time Data From Every Production Station

Sensors across every production station, crane, vehicle, and inspection point feed data continuously to the management platform. The factory knows its own state at all times — enabling the AI-assisted coordination that keeps production flowing without stoppages.

The integrated MES/ERP platform is the system of record for every element of production. The manufacturing execution system manages real-time production operations — issuing work instructions to automated systems, capturing sensor data from every production station, and tracking each component through the production flow. The ERP layer connects production to the broader operation: supply chain, procurement, workforce scheduling, and financial tracking. Scheduling adjusts dynamically as conditions on the floor change. This is a software integration challenge as much as a shipbuilding challenge — and it is the layer where the full technology stack comes together into a single coordinated operation.
The control environment is the operational model that enables the scale of this facility. Workstation arrays in each hall mezzanine provide real-time visibility into every operation below. Separate teams are assigned to each vessel slot, managing the production, quality, and logistics for their vessel independently. Above the slot-level teams, a coordination function oversees the interaction between slots across the entire hall: managing shared resources like overhead cranes, sequencing material flow, and coordinating the high-risk operations involved in moving vessels into and out of the hall. The operating model is layered oversight at every level — each function responsible for its own defined scope.
The sensor network is what makes the production management platform possible. Sensors on automated systems confirm position and execution quality. Sensors on cranes and automated vehicles track material movement in real time. Environmental sensors monitor conditions in welding zones and confined spaces. Inspection sensors verify completed work against the digital twin’s specifications. The data from all of these systems flows continuously into the management platform — giving the control environment a real-time picture of the entire facility’s status and enabling the AI-assisted coordination that keeps production flowing without stoppages.
Inventory Management
AI-Assisted Tracking of Long Lead Items

Tens of thousands of components — many with lead times measured in months — tracked continuously so that a delay in any single item never stops production. Significant stock maintained for critical components.

Production Intelligence
AI-Managed Coordination Across the Entire Operation

AI-managed coordination from supply chain and material flow through scheduling, sequencing, and process management. Human teams focus on judgment-intensive decisions while AI handles the coordination load across thousands of simultaneous production events.

Supply chain management at this scale requires proactive inventory tracking, not reactive ordering. A single missing component — one flange, one junction box, one specialty fitting — can stop production on an entire vessel if it has not arrived. The AI-assisted inventory management system exists specifically to prevent that outcome: tracking every component against production schedules, flagging shortfalls far enough in advance to reorder and receive before a stoppage occurs, and maintaining appropriate buffer stock on critical long-lead items.

The goal is not minimum inventory — it is minimum production stoppage risk. On components where any delay would halt construction, maintaining significant stock on hand is the correct operating model.
AI-managed production coordination operates at a scale and speed no human coordination structure can match. At full ramp, the facility is simultaneously managing material flow for dozens of vessels, scheduling work across hundreds of production stations, tracking thousands of components against delivery windows, and adjusting sequencing in real time as conditions change on the floor. Human production teams set priorities, make judgment calls on deviations, and manage the exceptions the system cannot resolve autonomously. AI handles the coordination volume — ensuring that the right component arrives at the right station at the right time, that production sequences across halls are optimized continuously, and that the management platform reflects the actual state of production at all times.
Validation Is This Technology Proven or Experimental?
The Technology Readiness Question

The core systems TMHG is implementing — digital twin management, IoT sensor networks, automated welding, AI-assisted inventory and production management, integrated MES/ERP platforms — are not experimental technology. They are the defining technologies of Industry 4.0, in production use today in the world’s most productive shipyards and across heavy industrial manufacturing. What is new is implementing them together, from first principles, with the current generation of hardware and software rather than systems installed 15–20 years ago.

The Advantage

IMPLEMENTING PROVEN SYSTEMS WITH MODERN TECHNOLOGY

The Core Thesis

The U.S. is operating shipyards stuck between generations 2 and 3, while the world’s leading Asian yards built their 4th-generation facilities 15–20 years ago with the best technology available at the time. TMHG builds today — with updated robotics, real-time data infrastructure, modern AI systems, and domestic innovation capacity that did not exist when those yards were commissioned. Implementing proven methodology on modern hardware and software, from first principles, produces meaningfully superior results.

Updated Hardware
Proven for 15–20 Years — Built on Technology That Didn’t Exist Then

The robotic and automated systems available today are substantially more capable than what was installed at Gen 3+ inception. TMHG starts with the current generation, not the generation those yards are running on aging equipment.

American Advantages
Software, Systems Integration, and Innovation

American competitive advantages in software development, systems integration, and industrial innovation compound on top of proven production methodology — producing capabilities existing yards cannot generate within their current structures.

The technology gap between 2005 and 2025 is substantial in the systems TMHG deploys. Multi-axis automated welding systems are faster, more precise, and more versatile than systems installed in leading Asian yards 15–20 years ago. AI-driven inventory and production management systems did not exist in their current form when heavy automation was first driven into block construction. Real-time sensor networks, digital twin platforms, and autonomous material handling systems represent capabilities that are either new or dramatically improved since 2005. TMHG does not merely replicate what was built then — it implements that proven core methodology on hardware and software infrastructure that did not exist when the original Gen 3+ builders were making their technology selections.
The U.S. competitive advantage in software and systems integration is directly applicable to the production management challenge. The integrated production management platform that runs a facility of this scale is a software development challenge as much as a shipbuilding challenge. The U.S. has the deepest software engineering talent pool in the world and access to the most advanced AI systems. The production methodology is proven. The technology stack is modern. The combination is what the Gen 4+ designation represents.
Image Attribution
Hero: Industrial laser welding robot — InMotion B.V. / CC BY-SA 3.0