AHI Roofing

AHI Roofing
Public company
Industry Construction
Headquarters Auckland, New Zealand
Area served
New Zealand
Products Roofing products
Services Construction
Website www.ahiroofing.com

AHI Roofing is a manufacturer of stone chip coated metal roof tiles based in Auckland, New Zealand and with plants in New Zealand, United States (California), Hungary and Malaysia.[1] The company sells under both the Gerard and Decra brand names.

History

Product development

AHI Roofing was created when Lou Fisher produced the world's first steel tile. Today AHI Roofing does business in over eighty countries worldwide[2] in steel roof tiles.

It was a world shortage of oil-based paint that began the coated steel tile story. In 1947, many large ironclad buildings in Britain were coated with a bituminous emulsion. It proved to be extremely tough and protective, adding to the life of the cladding.

The first coated metal roofing tiles to be made in New Zealand were produced by Martile Roofing Ltd in Howick in 1956 and were pressed from an aluminium manganese alloy. They were then coated with High Bake Enamel. By 1957, L.J. Fisher had bought the rights to use the Martile profile from A.L.W. Martinsen and Son Ltd and was producing his own tile. Part of the condition of the rights purchase was that Fisher’s four-pan tile with its bitumastic emulsion coating was to be made from galvanised steel, thereby ensuring a different product.

Returning to Auckland from the UK in 1957, Fisher started producing coated and chipped panels from galvanised steel for roofing and cladding. Originally the natural stone chips were added to prevent panels sticking together during transportation. However their attractive appearance quickly became a product feature customers demanded. Fisher also experimented with crushed shells and bricks before natural stone chips became the top choice for their aesthetics and durability.[3]

International market expansion

AHI expanded sales rapidly in the 1970s and 1980s. It was not until 1990 that a competitor made it to market called Metrotile (NZ) Ltd with a similar steel tile. AHI’s coated steel tiles were the first major innovation in residential roofing for more than thirty years. The new roofing material quickly became the choice of architects and major construction companies throughout New Zealand. AHI entered the European market in the 1970s. AHI’s earliest acrylic coated tiles have been used in the harsh winters of Canada from the 1970s and in Scandinavia from the 1980s.

The growing success of metal tile technology as an export product resulted in the commissioning of new manufacturing plants under licence, in Denmark, Malaysia and the United States by the late 1980s. It was during this period that the company moved to acrylic coating technology (for improved chip adhesion) and launched the Colortile product on the New Zealand market. The Gerard worldwide operation (excluding the United States) was purchased by Carter Holt Harvey in 1989 and the CoronaShake product was launched in 1992 and Oberon in 1995. The company is now owned by Fletcher Building.[3]

International offices

North America South America Oceania Europe Africa Asia

Timeline

Production

AHI Roofing chip-coated, pressed metal roofing tiles are made from steel that is manufactured by New Zealand Steel from black iron sand, found on the West Coast beaches of the North Island. The steel is coated with zinc/aluminium alloy (Zincalume).[5] The main component of the paint system is acrylic resin, produced in New Zealand. The coatings are water-based or water dispersed. The “chip” used to coat the textured roofing tiles is crushed natural rock quarried in New Zealand.

References

  1. Gibson, Anne (12 November 2007). "Fletcher closes in on $20m Hungary deal". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 11 September 2011.
  2. Gibson, Anne (26 March 2009). "First roof tiles emerge from Fletcher's new Hungary plant". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 11 September 2011.
  3. 1 2 Kate Hill. The History of Metal Tiles. Publication.
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-10-14. Retrieved 2010-03-29.
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-05-15. Retrieved 2010-03-25.

External links

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