Within hours of BMW saying it may build a new factory in the United States, Birmingham’s mayor tossed the Magic City’s name out for consideration.

“Hey BMW, Birmingham Motor Works sounds nice, doesn’t it? Let’s talk,” Mayor Randall Woodfin posted to his social media pages on Wednesday.

Multiple media outlets reported on Wednesday that BMW CEO Harald Krueger said the company’s U.S. sales are climbing enough to consider building another factory in the U.S.

As previously stated by former Jefferson County Commissioner David Carrington, Birmingham is in the middle of a diamond when it comes to automotive manufacturing.

A $1.6 billion Mazda Toyota Manufacturing USA facility will soon be constructed to the north, in west Huntsville, and Mercedes is located to the west, Honda is to the east and Hyundai is to the south.

Reuters reported Krueger, in an interview at the Los Angeles Auto Show, said a new BMW factory could potentially make transmissions and engines.

BMW currently has a vehicle assembly plant, in South Carolina, and is planning to open a Mexico factory next year.

Another factory would provide a natural currency hedge, Krueger said, in light of reports that President Donald Trump is considering a tariff on imported vehicles.

The BMW plant in South Carolina was announced back in 1992 after the state sought the project for three years. That announcement came one year before Mercedes-Benz decided to build a factory in Vance.