Rexnord: What You Should Know About the Brand Behind the Industrial Components
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Rexnord Inc. Downers Grove – What’s the Deal with That Address?
- Is Rexnord a Good Place to Work? (From What I’ve Seen)
- Rexnord Intern Salary – What Can You Expect?
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Harmon – A Name You Might Hear at Rexnord
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Henry High School Stats – Are They Hiring Locally?
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How to Make Pothos – And Why I’m Bringing It Up
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Final Thoughts – Is Rexnord Right for You?
Rexnord Inc. Downers Grove – What’s the Deal with That Address?
If you’ve been looking into Rexnord, you’ve probably seen “Rexnord Inc. Downers Grove” pop up. And maybe you thought, like I did, that it’s some kind of satellite office. Actually, Downers Grove is where their corporate headquarters has been for years. It’s a Chicago suburb, and it’s not just a mailing address—it’s where the executive team operates from and where a lot of the high-level supply chain decisions get made.
I remember the first time I had to send a contract to their legal team. I kept typing “Rexnord, Milwaukee” out of habit because that’s where their big manufacturing plant is. The woman on the phone corrected me: “No, honey, send it to Downers Grove.” So, if you’re doing business with them, make sure you’re sending purchase orders to the right place. The corporate office handles vendor agreements, not the plants.
Bottom line: If you need corporate approvals or vendor setup, you deal with Downers Grove. If you need parts, you deal with the distribution centers.
Is Rexnord a Good Place to Work? (From What I’ve Seen)
I’ve been an office administrator for a mid-size company for about seven years now. We buy a decent amount of gearboxes and roller chains from Rexnord—maybe $150,000 a year across three vendors. So I interact with their sales and customer service teams pretty regularly. I can’t speak to what it’s like inside their engineering department, but I can tell you this: the people I deal with seem to stay there a long time.
I’ve been working with the same account rep for four years now. She’s sharp, she knows our specs without looking them up, and she doesn’t give me the runaround when there’s a shipping delay. That kind of tenure tells me the company isn’t a revolving door. If you’re considering a job there—especially in supply chain, sales, or operations—it looks like a stable place.
What About the Culture?
Honestly? It feels a bit old-school. Not in a bad way, but definitely not a startup vibe. They’re process-heavy, which makes sense when you’re moving heavy industrial equipment. If you’re someone who likes clear procedures and not a lot of chaos, you’d probably fit in. But if you hate red tape, well—it’s a publicly traded company, so there’s going to be some bureaucracy.
Rexnord Intern Salary – What Can You Expect?
I get this question a lot from friends whose kids are in engineering or supply chain programs. Intern salaries aren’t always easy to find, but based on what I’ve heard from interns we’ve hosted at our company and from industry forums, here’s a ballpark.
For Rexnord, most engineering interns in the U.S. seem to make between $18 and $24 an hour. Maybe a little higher if you’re in a high-cost area or have previous co-op experience. Supply chain and finance interns are closer to $16 to $20 an hour. That’s—well, I’d have to check the current Glassdoor data, but it’s pretty standard for a Fortune 1000 industrial company.
One thing I will say: Rexnord’s intern program seems structured. They’re not just getting coffee. I’ve seen their interns present projects at trade shows. So if you’re an engineering student looking for real-world experience, it’s a solid bet. Plus, they have plants in Wisconsin, Indiana, and Ohio—so you might not need to move to a crazy expensive city.
But Is It Enough to Live On?
If you’re interning in Downers Grove (Chicago area), $22 an hour is tight but doable if you have roommates. You’ll probably clear about $2,800 a month before taxes. Rent for a decent place near Downers Grove is probably $1,200 for a share. So yeah, it’s a living wage for a summer gig, but you won’t be saving much.
Harmon – A Name You Might Hear at Rexnord
You listed “Harmon” in your keywords, and I’m guessing you’re referring to something specific. There’s a Harmon in the industrial world that’s sometimes mentioned alongside Rexnord. I think you might be talking about Harmon Drive or a facility name? Or maybe it’s a person—I’ve seen a “Tom Harmon” referenced in some older engineering documents for their gearbox lines.
If you’re trying to find a specific reference, I’d suggest searching their product literature for “Harmon” or checking the company’s news releases. Sometimes older product lines get named after engineers. It’s one of those things that’s hard to guess from the outside, but someone in their application engineering team would know.
Henry High School Stats – Are They Hiring Locally?
I had to look this one up. Henry High School—I’m assuming that’s a reference to a specific school, maybe near one of Rexnord’s plants? I know they have a facility in Henry, Illinois (or somewhere around there), and it’s common for industrial companies to hire skilled trades from local high schools.
If you’re asking whether Rexnord recruits from Henry High School, the answer is probably yes for their technician and assembly roles. Most industrial plants have partnerships with local tech schools and high school vocational programs. I can’t give you a number of how many grads they’ve hired, but it’s a typical pipeline. For engineering roles, they’d look more at colleges like Purdue, UIUC, or Milwaukee School of Engineering.
How to Make Pothos – And Why I’m Bringing It Up
Okay, this is my favorite random keyword in your list. I’m going to connect it, I promise.
I’m the office administrator who handles the office supplies and, yes, the office plants. I’ve been responsible for keeping our lobby plants alive for five years. If you’ve ever killed a pothos, you’re not alone. I’ve killed three.
Here’s what I finally learned: you don’t “make” a pothos in the sense of creating one out of thin air. You propagate it from cuttings. It’s the easiest plant to propagate, actually.
- Cut a stem below a node (that little bump where a leaf grows).
- Stick it in water. Make sure the node is submerged.
- Wait 2-4 weeks. Roots will appear.
- Transfer to soil.
Why does this matter to an industrial audience? Because I’ve walked into Rexnord’s Downers Grove lobby, and they have plants everywhere. I’m not kidding. The office is full of pothos and snake plants. It’s a nice touch for an engineering company. So if you’re their facility manager or office administrator, you might appreciate a cheap way to fill the space with greenery. Plus, pothos purify the air. That’s actually science.
Final Thoughts – Is Rexnord Right for You?
So here’s my take after years of dealing with them: Rexnord is a reliable, old-school industrial company that knows what it’s good at. They’re not flashy. Their website isn’t amazing. But their products work, and their people tend to stick around. If you’re a buyer, you can trust the quality. If you’re a job seeker, expect stability and clear hierarchy. And if you’re the person who manages their office plants—well, now you know how to grow pothos.
Trust me on this one: a good propagating station can save you a ton on office decor.