While the city’s cafes and startup hubs focus on the next big SaaS app, there’s a much more serious industry quietly booming in Riga: defense tech. Frankenburg Technologies has officially opened a factory right here in the capital, and they aren’t building consumer gadgets.
The facility is geared up to manufacture Mark I anti-drone missiles, with a goal of producing 1,500 units this year alone. In a geopolitical climate where the Baltics are hyper-aware of regional security, this is a massive move. It’s not just about beefing up the local military—it’s about Latvia staking a claim as a serious player in the European defense manufacturing space.
This development is bringing high-level engineering jobs to Riga, attracting talent that previously might have moved out West. It signals a shift in the local economy, moving from pure software to critical, hard-tech manufacturing that supports broader NATO initiatives in the region.
It’s a sharp pivot from the usual tech headlines covered here on Riga Talk, but an important one. Riga is proving it has the engineering talent and the infrastructure to build serious hardware. It’s a sobering reality of the times, but also a flex of Latvian industrial capability. Watch this space.


