Nike swings for $1.2b market with golf ball lab: video
Nike swings for $1.2b market with golf ball lab: video

It's easy to overlook the nondescript structure that is Nike (NYSE:NKE - News)'s Oven West. From the street, the 20,000-square-foot building sits quietly tucked in an office park in Beaverton, Ore., about two miles from Nike's corporate headquarters.

But walk through the doors, and there's no mistaking these interiors with those of its neighbors. Oven West is a stand-alone R&D laboratory dedicated entirely to golf balls-developing, testing, and ultimately bringing new models to market.

That may sound like a relatively simple task. After all, we're talking about balls that fit in the palm of your hand and have been known to easily disappear in sand traps, woods and ponds. (In the U.S. alone an estimated 300 million golf balls are said to be lost each year.)

But a tour of Nike's Oven West quickly dispels that assumption. For Nike Golf, it's a science requiring some 40 engineers, an array of sophisticated machines, designated testing areas, even a golf ball cannon. The balls made here-not to mention their raw materials-are put through every kind of test, from a machine that looks like an arcade claw game that makes sure each ball conforms to regulation, to a so-called "spinach test" in which balls are dumped in a vat of water and fresh spinach and spun around for up to two days to test grass stain prevention.

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And every detail is accounted for. Take the outer coating. There's a room dedicated to this step, where balls sit atop pegs and slowly wind their way along a conveyor belt as the coating is carefully applied by a machine. If the thickness of that coating is off by even a couple microns-we're talking the thickness level of a fifth of a strand of hair-then the ball's resulting trajectory could be affected by as much as several yards when hit.

The lab's goal: One new prototype or design tweak per day.

"This represents the epicenter of everything golf balls," says Cindy Davis, president of Nike Golf. "This literally is where all the great innovations are created, hatched, tested and ultimately brought to market."

Hence the name Oven West. Nike's apparel and footwear R&D lab is called The Kitchen. So when Nike Golf decided to build out a separate R&D lab for golf clubs, just outside of Fort Worth, Texas, the term "oven" seemed appropriate - both in terms of "cooking up" innovations and thanks to the summer heat, says Davis. So when the company decided to double down on golf balls and build a second stand-alone facility in Beaverton a few years ago, the natural choice was Oven West.