
Dale DeGroff, senior designer; Vice President of Finance Pat Scheets; President & CEO of Iconacy Tom Allen; Cassandra White, Tom Allen’s granddaughter; Director of Knee Design & Development Raj Duggineni; Anthony Zannis, product manager;
Vice President of Sales & Marketing Kevin Cox; Craig Charlton, director of manufacturing; Cameron Plew, Lake City Bank;
Marc Ruhling, director of Shoulder Design & Development;
Mark Dobson IOM, president and CEO Warsaw Kosciusko County Chamber of Commerce; Karen Mayer, Teachers Credit Union, and chamber board; Howard Woodward; Tabitha Williamson, Lake City Bank; Denny Hively, 1st Source Bank and chamber board; Dee Anna Muraski, Grace College & Seminary and chamber board; and Chad Wainscott, engineer. (Photo provided)
Iconacy Orthopedic Implants LLC, 4130 Corridor Dr., Warsaw, held a ribbon cutting ceremony this morning becoming Warsaw’s newest family of orthopedic developers.
Iconacy President and CEO Tom Allen said $2.63 million was invested in the company, which produces and markets a total hip replacement system and holds an estimated 36 patents, in renovations and equipment to the new facility. Iconacy now occupies nearly 50,000-square-feet of office space and nine acres of land which also houses a warehouse. Currently, Iconacy is a research and development company and employees engineers with more than 100 years of combined experience in the industry.
The I-Hip system consists of femoral stem and acetabular cup porous coated components intended for cementless, press-fit fixation, patented highly cross-linked polyethylene liners, and Co-Cr alloy femoral heads.
Also held this morning just across Corridor Drive from Iconacy, was a ribbon cutting ceremony for Micro Machines.
On Sept. 4, Micro Machine opened a second facility in Warsaw. The local location is based in a 10,000-square-foot facility and will allow Micro Machine to continue its growth as a best in class medical device manufacturer.
Micro Machine is headquartered in Kalamazoo, Mich.

