June 26, 2019

Windows and doors manufacturer extends Travis Perkins partnership

Euramax Solutions, a leading manufacturer of PVCu windows and doors, has announced that it will extend its product range with the UK’s largest builders’ merchants, Travis Perkins. The new range will see new products and colour options available to the public in Spring 2019. Based in Barnsley, South Yorkshire, Euramax Solutions

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So… we need to talk about ‘fatbergs’

Let’s set the scene. You’ve just cooked a huge family roast dinner. I’m talking roast potatoes, roast parsnips, roast chicken – the lot. However, while you were cooking you forgot to use any tin foil, so the excess oil and fat you used is now effectively lining the baking tins.

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Kawneer helps Wales get creative

Aluminium glazing systems by Kawneer feature at Welsh University’s new creative and digital centre. Architectural glazing systems by leading UK manufacturer Kawneer played a key role in a new state-of-the-art building which is at the heart of Wales’ creative and digital future. Kawneer’s AA®110 curtain walling, AA®720 doors and window

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Latest Issue
Issue 324 : Jan 2025

June 26, 2019

Windows and doors manufacturer extends Travis Perkins partnership

Euramax Solutions, a leading manufacturer of PVCu windows and doors, has announced that it will extend its product range with the UK’s largest builders’ merchants, Travis Perkins. The new range will see new products and colour options available to the public in Spring 2019. Based in Barnsley, South Yorkshire, Euramax Solutions has manufactured PVCu windows and doors for over 65 years. With its 200,000sq. ft manufacturing facility, Euramax supplies a range of composite and PVCu doors and windows to the modular, new build, holiday home, DIY and retail sectors across the UK. As one of the largest UK suppliers to trade professionals and self-builders, buildings merchants Travis Perkins has over 660 branches across the UK and supplies more than 100,000 product lines. Euramax has supplied products to Travis Perkins since 2004, primarily delivering standard white PVCu windows. In April 2019 the Euramax product range was extend, adding coloured PVCu windows, deluxe French doors, sliding patio doors and Bi-Fold doors to the range available to customers. “Trends in the market are always changing and evolving, which means more choice is needed to meet customer demand”, said Richard Banks, commercial director at Euramax. “As a leading manufacturer of windows and doors, it’s important to take advantage of the market shift and provide more options for customers, which is why we have extended our product range with one of the most notable UK builders merchants. “We understand that appearance is one of the primary reasons why homeowners upgrade their windows and doors, so we know that colour and style is important. Previously, Travis Perkins only supplied a selection of Euramax products in white, but as 40 per cent of the market want coloured doors and windows, we have added Chartwell green and Golden Oak options, along with Anthracite grey as it is becoming increasingly popular,” explained Banks. “We also know that customers are always looking to improve their home’s energy efficiency, which is why all of our products at combine energy efficient frames and insulating glass to deliver the best thermal performance possible,” Banks added. “Aside from our extended product range supplied at Travis Perkins, our bespoke made to measure service means that customers can purchase windows and doors to fit their exact needs.” The range of products is available now at Travis Perkins stores across the UK as well as on the website for customer collection or delivery. To find out more about Euramax and their products, visit www.euramax.co.uk or call +44 (0) 1226 361639.To browse the full range of Euramax products available at Travis Perkins, go to www.travisperkins.co.uk.

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So… we need to talk about ‘fatbergs’

Let’s set the scene. You’ve just cooked a huge family roast dinner. I’m talking roast potatoes, roast parsnips, roast chicken – the lot. However, while you were cooking you forgot to use any tin foil, so the excess oil and fat you used is now effectively lining the baking tins. It’s no big deal though – you can always sort it out after you’ve eaten. You move to the table to get stuck into your food. Before you start eating though, you accidentally knock over the jug of gravy when reaching for a knife and fork. You run back into the kitchen, grabbing some kitchen roll to clear up the mess. You get the stain all cleaned up and are just about to throw away the dirty kitchen roll, when you notice your bin is full. Typical. You want to get back to your nice hot food as quickly as you can so, what would you do in this situation? For many of us, we’d do exactly the same thing. We would either throw the excess oil from the baking tins down the sink while it’s in liquid form, or wait for it to congeal and leave the dishwasher to sort out the problem. Then, we’d potentially throw the used kitchen roll down the toilet so we could get back to our food sooner rather than later. After all, kitchen roll is quite similar to toilet paper so it must break down in the same way, right? Adjusting attitudes Wrong. It’s attitudes like these which contribute to the growing ‘fatberg’ problem that the UK is currently facing. When we flush non-flushable items down the toilet, or dispose of fats and oils down the sink, we don’t only create problems for plumbers, we also create issues for ourselves. Nappies, tights, condoms, plasters, sanitary towels, tampons, kitchen roll, dental floss, oil, fats, food waste – none of these products are designed to go down sewage pipes. Our old-fashioned sewage systems simply aren’t equipped to deal with them. When these items get disposed of, either via the sink, dishwasher or toilet, they accumulate and block the sewage pipes. Over time, this blockage builds up to form a large mass of disgusting waste by-products known as a fatberg. After this mass grows to a certain size, it causes a number of expensive problems to occur – both plumbing-related and health-related. Whether it be flooding inside or outside your home or a health problem due to overflowing sewage these blockages cause a mess and are expensive to sort out. For a blocked pipe alone, a plumber can cost around £200 to sort the issue out. Couple this with that fact that there are 6.7 million blocked drains in the UK each year, and that works out at over £1.3 billion each year. Contain the problem So, what can you do to prevent fatbergs? We now know that incorrectly disposing of fats and oils can cause blockages in our sewage systems, so how should you dispose of them instead? You can’t simply throw liquid oil or fat in the bin – it would go everywhere and stink out your home. One thing you can do is use a spare container – such as a margarine tub, plastic pot or jam jar – to capture any excess cooking fat and oil. You can then safely place this into the bin, making sure the lid is on tight beforehand! You could even save excess fat or oil to reuse another time, but make sure you’re aware of these things before you do. As a preventative measure, you should also scrape off any leftover food on your plate before loading it into the sink or dishwasher. Or, if you’ve got a dog, you could just let them handle the leftovers on your behalf. Three Ps (and a V) Toilets are only able to handle the three P’s (pee, poo and toilet paper), and the occasional V (vomit). Anything else you think you can throw down the toilet, you can’t – put it in the bin. Even toilet tissues which say that they’re flushable, they’re not – they actually take significantly longer to decompose than traditional toilet paper does. Just because they have a cute golden retriever puppy on them doesn’t mean you should believe what they say. Make sure your bathroom has a bin available to throw non-flushable items away into. It’s all to easy to fall in a pattern of ‘I’ll flush this wet wipe, just this once’, but don’t. Solving the fatberg problem requires a solid effort from everybody. Remember that it’s not just your house your helping, it’s the wider environment too. The tip of the fatberg While it’s all well and good knowing how to dispose of fat correctly, and understanding which items you can and can’t flush, more still needs to be done to make the issue more widely known. Every individual can play their part, but it’s also up to certain industries to make changes as well. Fatbergs should not be a problem that only the water industry have to deal with. The FMCG industry should be manufacturing products and packaging that clearly states how to correctly dispose of them. Likewise, food manufacturers should be crafting foods that either don’t use or require much oil to cook. While fatbergs aren’t a recent phenomenon, and there are certain strategies already in place, more public campaigns are also needed to make people more aware of the problem. This will involve a combined effort from both the government – to start the conversation – and the retail industry – to broadcast it out to the wider public. Effective alternative options for disposing of waste fat and oil also need to be created and implemented, so that people don’t have to rely on having a spare margarine container on hand. As this article discusses as well, our sewage systems really are in dire need of an upgrade. The only saving grace that fatbergs have is that

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Kawneer helps Wales get creative

Aluminium glazing systems by Kawneer feature at Welsh University’s new creative and digital centre. Architectural glazing systems by leading UK manufacturer Kawneer played a key role in a new state-of-the-art building which is at the heart of Wales’ creative and digital future. Kawneer’s AA®110 curtain walling, AA®720 doors and window vents, and series 190 doors feature on the £10 million new creative and digital centre, Canolfan S4C Yr Egin, located on the University of Wales Trinity Saint David’s (UWTSD) Carmarthen campus. Specified by BDP architects, they were installed over 10 months by a team of up to eight from Kawneer-approved dealer APiC UK for main contractor Kier Construction. The AA®110 zone-drained curtain walling with 65mm sightlines was used alongside Kawneer’s thermally superior AA®720 doors and series 190 automatic entrance doors on the ground floor which houses a spacious public café alongside performance space and auditorium as well as resources for community groups and offices for the building’s administrative staff. The AA®110 system also features on the first floor, which is let to the centre’s main anchor tenant – Welsh language broadcaster S4C – for its headquarters (corporate, communications, finance, business affairs and legal departments) alongside actuator-operated AA®720 top-hung, open-out window vents. And it also features on the third floor, which is let to a number of different companies working in the creative and digital sector, as well as on a clerestory lantern above an atrium which overarches the three storeys. Many of these tenants will offer work experience to UWTSD students, allowing them to make the most of the university’s connections during their studies. BDP’s award-winning design was based on the close relationship between the university, prospective tenants of the centre and the wider community. This relationship, or trinity, is reflected in its form – a simple triangle that grows from Carmarthenshire’s soil, a titular reference to Yr Egin – a Welsh play on words referencing energy and birth. The layout of the building encourages collaboration, communication and interaction between all users of the building, where initial ideas can be shared and developed – an incubator for the establishment of new companies and a breeding ground for a new generation of creative and technical people. Externally, the theme of trinity is expressed through the use of differing materials in a tripartite arrangement – a dynamic, reflective volume is seen to float over a solid plinth at ground level and a translucent intermediate layer reinforces the distinction between plinth and reflective object. The 3,600m2 building is linked to the main campus by a large public square which allows for the staging of a variety of outdoor activities in its stunning Carmarthenshire location between the Pembrokeshire coast and the Brecon Beacons. On the use of Kawneer’s systems, BDP’s project architect noted: “As most of the façade comprises curtain wall we needed a system that could meet a wide range of performance requirements. We specified Kawneer due to their extensive range of features which met the functional and aesthetic demands of the project. “The Kawneer curtain walling had a key role in the project. As a naturally ventilated building it has an active façade that reacts to changing environmental conditions. The Kawneer system houses the various components that protect the interior from the elements while allowing air to flow through. “A key element of the building’s aesthetic was to create a distinct character for each level of the building – a challenge for a facade almost entirely constructed from curtain wall. This challenge was met by the extensive range of Kawneer features, especially the fin capping, which was vital to the characterisation of the different elements of the facade.” The durability, strength to weight ratio and life cycle benefits of aluminium were key factors in the consideration of Kawneer’s system when specifying the external envelope. APiC UK senior sales and estimating technician Andrew Finn said: “Working with Kawneer we were able to offer solutions for all the differing project requirements including profiled vertical faced caps with new dies for the 100mm and 150mm profiles to the ground-floor curtain wall which was specified to accommodate the vertical movement of the building. “The 100mm, 150mm and 200mm vertical faced caps provide a strong vertical emphasis to the curtain wall. The use of differing sizes and finishes to these are designed to provide a ‘flickering effect”. Canolfan S4C Yr Egin was opened by the Rt Hon Carwyn Jones AM, first Minister of Wales, in October 2018 and has since won a RICS Wales award for best commercial building. RICS judges said the team behind the project – including Mott McDonald, BDP, Rural Office for Architecture, and the University of Wales Trinity St David – had succeeded in designing a scheme that encouraged occupiers to collaborate, network and exchange information and ideas, to innovate and create jobs. For further information about Canolfan S4C Yr Egin, please visit https://yregin.cymru/

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