St. Aloysius Church by Erdy McHenry Architecture with Unadilla.
CUSTOM FABRICATION/ Ace Styline Allegheny Millwork D. Reis Contracting Eastern Millwork, Inc. (EMI) Fabio Salvatori Woodworking Fetzer Architectural Woodwork Molba Construction Nova Remodeling |
RB Woodcraft S&S Moulding Terminal Millwork Unadilla Laminated Products
Bettencourt Green Building Supplies Hokusan/JACARANDA Mensch Mill & Lumber Corp. Smith + Fong Plyboo Vixen Hill Manufacturing
|
“Ace Styline is a very professional company that strictly follows AWI standards. They have a large, efficient shop and install all over the country. These are the guys to use if you’re looking for low drama and someone willing to help solve problems.”
Rhoda Kennedy
Deborah Berke Architects
“EMI brought a high level of craftsmanship and precision to the millwork on the New York Law School project. There are 12 classrooms and a large auditorium with Socratic seating, all with different radii requiring custom desk installation. EMI was able to provide quality shop drawings that required limited revisions, and all components of millwork were tracked with barcodes to facilitate craftsmanship and a high level of coordination with other trades.”
David O’Neil
BKSK Architects
“Our dialogue with Fetzer on the millwork in Alice Tully Hall was very collaborative and incredibly rewarding. They have a young team of engineers and were really able to assist us on a challenging project. They could have pulled back and covered their tracks when it got hard but instead they engaged with every step from fabrication to assembly.”
Anthony Saby
Diller Scofidio + Renfro
“The guy that engineered the roof of St. Aloysius Church is Daniel Tully out of Santa Fe. He patented this technology in the late ‘70s. No one’s used it in 20 years. It’s a hyperbolic paraboloid structure with wooden beams that outline a frame topped by three layers of plywood. Unadilla Laminated Structures fabricated it as a monolithic structure in their shop in upstate New York, which looks like a big skateboard park. Then they cut it apart, shipped it to the site, and reassembled it.”
Scott Erdy
Erdy McHenry Architecture