MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This litigation began in December, 1990, when David Snow (“Snow”), Linda Snow, Jason Snow, and Kevin Snow brought suit in Essex Superior Court, from which defendant Harnischfeger removed the case to this court under 28 U.S.C. § 1446. Snow, an electrician, alleges he was injured by a Harnisch-feger Corp. crane at a Refuse Energy Systems Company (“RESCO”) trash-to-energy plant in Saugus, Massachusetts. Harnisch-feger seeks summary judgment against Snow, arguing that a Massachusetts statute of repose, M.G.L. c. 260, § 2B, applies to bar this action against a person who made an improvement to real property. I agree and will consequently grant the defendant’s motion.
I
In assessing Harnischfeger’s motion for summary judgment, all of “[t]he evidence of the non-movant is to be believed, and all justifiable inferences are to be drawn in his favor.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
On December 29, 1987, Snow, an employee of RESCO, worked from a crane’s support trolley to repair an overhead lighting problem at the company’s Saugus plant. After finishing a portion of his work, Snow and a co-worker came down off the trolley and onto an adjoining catwalk (which served as the service platform to the crane). 1 Both men thought they saw smoke coming out of a trash hopper. Better to investigate, “Snow leaned over the [catwalk] railing and placed his hand on the [crane’s] rail to steady himself.” 2 Meanwhile his co-worker mistakenly gave the “all clear” sign to the crane opera *24 tor. When the operator moved the crane, its trolley came down the rail over Snow’s right hand, severing three fingers and a portion of his palm.
Snow alleges that Harnischfeger’s design of the crane and its trolley was negligent: the trolley wheels should have been equipped with wheel guards; the trolley should have been equipped with an audible or visual warning system; the trolley should have been provided with a “proper lockout system” (which would have required both Snow and his co-worker to unlock the trolley before it would run).
Harnischfeger argues that even if Snow’s allegations of negligence were correct, his claims would be barred by the applicable Massachusetts statute of repose. The RES-CO plant and its two overhead cranes were constructed in 1973-75, and the plant opened for business in 1975. The cranes, Harniseh-feger alleges, were improvements to real property, bringing their manufacturer within the protection of c. 260, § 2B, which provides:
Actions of tort for damages arising out of any deficiency or neglect in the design, planning, construction or general administration of an improvement to real property ... shall be commenced only within three years next after the cause of action accrues; provided, however, that in no event shall such actions be commenced more than six years after the earlier of the dates of: (1) the opening of the improvement to use; or (2) substantial completion of the improvement and the taking of possession for occupancy by the owner.
Because the plant and its cranes were opened to use in 1975, and Snow brought his action in 1990, Harnischfeger asserts Snow’s cause is barred by Massachusetts law.
In opposition, Snow contends that Har-nischfeger is not a company charged with the “design, planning, construction or general administration” of real property improvements; and that the crane RESCO purchased was not an “improvement” to RESCO’s real property. 3 By answering the second question first, one can most efficiently answer the question whether Harnischfeger is within c. 260, § 2B’s protected class.
II
Harnischfeger asserts, without contradiction, that between March, 1973 and June, 1974, it worked with an engineering company employed by RESCO to design and assemble the plant’s cranes.
The components of the crane which were custom designed were: (a) the grapple buckets, (b) the length and diameter of wire rope, (c) the hoist drum length and diameter, (d)‘ the gear reducers, (e) the motors (electric), (f) the sizes of the control components, (g) the trolley spread, (h) the electrical conductor system, (i) the operator’s cab, (j) the bridge girder sections, (k) the bridge drives and speeds, (l) the trolley drives and speeds, (m) the size of electrical conductors, (n) the bridge and trolley wheel size and types, (o) the bridge rails, and (p) the crane electrical control systems and electrical protection panels. (Toth Affidavit at ¶ 5.]
Harnischfeger’s Memorandum in Support of Summary Judgment at 4. 4 The cranes load *25 refuse into feed hoppers, and are integral to the plant’s conversion of trash into energy.
There exists a mini-jurisprudence of what constitutes an improvement to real property sufficient to bring the improver within a state’s statute of repose; and a subset of cases even treats Harnischfeger and its cranes in particular. The Supreme Judicial Court, in construing c. 260, § 2B, has noted its holding, in another context, that “[t]he word ‘improvements’ is of broad signification,”
Milligan v. Tibbetts Engineering Corp.,
Consistent with the SJC’s plain meaning approach to c. 260, § 2B, Massachusetts courts have held that designers, constructors, or planners a) of bleachers adapted for a skating rink, 5 b) of an electrical distribution panel for an electric plant, 6 c) of aluminum siding 7 and foam insulation 8 for a private home, d) of a prefabricated building for a transportation authority, 9 e) of a mooring system for a shipboard cocktail lounge, 10 f) of a student center and its plate glass door panels, 11 were all actors within the protection of the State’s statute of repose.
Two Massachusetts eases, both concerning electric panels, furnish by their contrasts a ready explication of the statute. In
Dighton v. Federal Pacific Electric Co.,
In
Parent v. Stone & Webster Engineering Corp.,
Harnischfeger’s particularized service in designing and constructing the crane in
*26
stalled at the RESCO plant makes it an actor within the protection of the Massachusetts statute of repose. Harnischfeger’s work is not similar to the materialman’s in
Dighton
nor to that of others excluded from the compass of the statute.
See, e.g., Raffel v. Perley,
In opposition to this conclusion, Snow makes six points in chief. First, he cites
McCalla v. Harnischfeger Corp.,
For its part, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has specifically rejected the reasoning which provides the basis for the New Jersey court’s holding.
[Plaintiff] invites us to make the scope of § 2B dependent on the common law of “fixtures.” But § 2B makes no reference to “fixtures,” nor does it appear that the Legislature intended, by its choice of the common term “improvement,” to subsume that tangle of highly technical meanings, often distinct in diverse legal contexts, which is the law of fixtures. We align ourselves with “[t]he overwhelming majority of courts [which] have eschewed a rigid fixture analysis.... ” Heller, The District of Columbia’s Architects’ and Builders’ Statute of Repose: Its Application and Need for Amendment, 34 Cath.U.L.Rev. 919, 932 (1985).
Dighton,
Second, the Hamischfeger crane, Snow maintains, is removable; therefore, since it is not “permanent,” it is without the Massachusetts statute.
13
Of course, that an item can be removed or replaced hardly means it cannot constitute an improvement. Aluminum siding can be removed; insulation can be replaced; a roof can be rebuilt; a chimney can be torn out and refashioned. Snow’s argument was expressly rejected by the Supreme Judicial Court in
McDonough,
Third, Snow claims that since Harnischfeger has manufactured 29,000 cranes, it cannot, as a matter of law, be a designer of the sort protected by c. 260, § 2B. However, Harnischfeger’s 28,999 other cranes are not at issue in this case, and evidence on their mode of manufacture, or whether they were designed for particular purchasers would not be material. As to this crane, uncontradicted record evidence establishes it was designed and fitted to meet the specific requirements of the RESCO plant, as noted above. Further, that a company engaged in design designs many buildings, or designs many improvements to real property, does not determine whether the designer is within the pro
*27
tected class. The purpose of the Massachusetts statute is not merely to protect experimental designs; its rationale “is hardly dependent on some minimum level of creativity on the part of the building designer.”
Cournoyer v. Massachusetts Bay Transp. Auth.,
Fourth, Snow argues that a crane such as Harnischfeger’s is not the only means of moving trash and thereby enhancing the value of the plant; and fifth, that since Har-nischfeger did not itself install the crane at the plant, it is not part of the class of actors protected by the statute of repose.
That other design solutions to the problem of moving and sorting trash in the RESCO plant might be better, or more economical, or less labor intensive, or that other machines or crews of workers could effectively do the labor of the Harnischfeger crane is irrelevant. The question is whether the crane was an improvement to real property which enhanced the property’s value; not whether other improvements might be made which would yield similar — or even greater— increases in value, but by other means. The material fact that the crane increased the plant’s value to some degree is not in dispute here.
Harnischfeger need not have itself installed the crane in the RESCO plant to benefit from the statute. Harnischfeger’s activity will be protected if it custom-designed an improvement to real property; in other words, if it manufactured its crane to the particular specifications of the RESCO plant, and thereby rendered a “particular improvement[ ] to [a] particular piece[] of real property.”
Dighton,
... if a piece of metal sculpture were welded to an exposed girder in a building, it certainly could be characterized as “a permanent addition to or betterment of’ the property, one “enhancing] its capital value”_ But would that tell us whether, or to what extent, the sculptor had been involved in the protected activity of “improvement to real property”? We think not. If he produced the sculpture on commission by the developer to specifications provided in part by the architect and the engineer, we might conclude that he is protected by § 2B; but if he mass-produced the sculpture and sold it for use in a variety of contexts, or for incorporation into any building, we would conclude that he had been involved merely in the activity of producing and selling a fungible commodity, and not in the activity of improving real estate.
Harnischfeger, as the RESCO plant’s crane designer and manufacturer, producing a crane to meet “specifications provided in part by the architect and engineer,” fits even more securely within section 2B’s protected class than the sculptor in example one, above. 14
*28
Finally, Snow asserts that Harnisch-feger did not “render[] any particularized services in the design or construction of the RESCO building.” Snow’s Supplemental Memorandum in Opposition to Summary Judgment at 7. However, the Massachusetts statute of repose treats improvements to real property, not to
buildings
alone. Massachusetts courts have not required that, to benefit from the protections of c. 260, § 2B, an actor must have designed or constructed a building, or even part of a building.
See, e.g., Crandall Dry Dock,
In the language Massachusetts courts have used in construing c. 260, § 2B, the Har-nischfeger crane is clearly a “permanent addition to or betterment of’ the RESCO plant; it “enhances [the plant’s] capital value”; it “involves the expenditure of labor or money”; it is “designed to make the property more useful or valuable”; and it is an item plainly “distinguished from ordinary repairs.”
Milligan,
Ill
Snow brought this action more than six years after Harnischfeger’s crane was built and opened for use in the RESCO plant. Therefore, his action is extinguished by the Massachusetts statute of repose. Harnisch-feger’s motion for summary judgment is hereby ALLOWED.
Notes
. Harnischfeger’s Response to Snow’s Request for Admissions, Response 10.
. Plaintiff’s Pretrial Memorandum at 4.
. Snow also argues that the parties dispute material issues of fact; but these material issues turn out to be merely arguments about how to apply law to the established facts (e.g., whether Har-nischfeger is in the "construction business” for purposes of c. 260, § 2B when it manufactures cranes to be installed in buildings). See Snow's Memorandum in Opposition to Summary Judgment at 7.
. Snow asserts that the trolley provided by Har-nischfeger for the RESCO crane was originally designed for a Florida purchaser, and merely adapted or sent along to RESCO. First, even if part of an improvement is mass-produced, that does not make the entire improvement stand outside the statute of repose. Second, it is not self-evident that even if the trolley constituted the entire item at issue here, that it would advance Snow’s cause to assert it was custom-designed for one purchaser, and then sold, at the last minute, to another. The trolley remains an item built from
"individual expertise
not susceptible of the quality control standards of the factory.”
Dighton v. Federal Pacific Electric Co.,
. McDonough v. Marr Scaffolding Co.,
.
Parent v. Stone & Webster Engineering Corp.,
.
Salinsky v. Perma-Home Corp.,
.
Conley v. Scott Products, Inc.,
.
Cournoyer v. Massachusetts Bay Transp. Auth.,
.
Anthony's Pier Four, Inc. v. Crandall Dry Dock Engineers, Inc.,
.
Klein v. Catalano,
.
Miller v. Consolidated Aluminum Corp.,
. "The fact that the trolleys of the overhead cranes were replaced in 1990, negates the defendant's argument that the overhead cranes and trolleys are permanent fixtures." Snow's Memorandum in Opposition to Summary Judgment at 5.
. In its Supplemental Memorandum, Harnischfeger refers to a recently decided case in the Western District of Missouri,
Hayslett v. Harnischfeger Corp.,
[A] defendant such as Harnischfeger may make "two separate and distinct arguments” that it is covered by the statute. "First, a manufacturer may claim that its activity in fabricating, assembling or manufacturing building materials or a component part incorporated within the real property in the construction of the improvement 'is, [sic] performing or furnishing, ... construction, including ... construction services, of the improvement.’ " The second, and alternative, argument available to a defendant such as Harnischfeger is that “it performed or furnished design, planning or engineering devices by reason of the design and engineering activities involved in developing its product.”
Hayslett at 1297.
While I find the Missouri district court’s reasoning in Hayslett unexceptionable, Hayslett adds only to the weight of authority already cited above, in footnote 12. Moreover, Massachusetts courts have not now, nor may they ever, adopt Missouri’s two prong test for applying its statute of repose. (I note, however, that Snow has sought to apply to Harnischfeger a very narrow version of the first prong of the Missouri test without giving Harnischfeger the benefit of the second prong. That is, Snow argues, in essence, that if Harnischfeger did not custom design and install materials critical to the building housing *28 the RESCO plant, it is not a protected actor for purposes of c. 260, § 2B. If it did not custom design some necessary part of the building— walls, floor, foundation, roof—; or if it did not itself install the product of its manufacture, then, Snow seems to contend, Harnischfeger is a mere materialman or supplier. But, as noted above, that cramped reading of section 2B is not a persuasive interpretation of Massachusetts law. Snow would like to require Harnischfeger to be a general administrator of a real property improvement; but the statute also provides protection for designers and planners of such improvements. Harnischfeger falls in this latter category.)
. Of course, as I have here several times emphasized, "the fact that a producer's
product
may be usable by persons involved in protected acts tells us nothing about whether the producer’s
activity
is protected_”
Dighton,
