Lineup of Great Speakers Highlights Surface Expo

When I attended the Surface Fabrication & Design Expo in Las Vegas in February, I noticed a significant reduction in the number of companies displaying new products on the trade show floor. In past years, I’ve written columns focusing on new products useful to countertop fabricators that I’ve discovered at the Expo. But in my opinion, the real strength of this year’s Expo was in the outstanding lineup of speakers featured at the seminars.

Covering topics ranging from sustainability and designing with concrete to cutting-edge fabrication techniques, the speakers brought a wealth of knowledge and expertise to the show.

‘Solid’ Architecture

Martin Funck is a partner in Rosskopf & Partner AG, the renowned German solid surface fabricator, founded in 1988. In 1991, the company expanded by opening a solid surface fabrication facility in Hennersdorf, Saxony, a formerly East German town near Dresden. In 1997, the company opened a world-class quartz countertop fabrication facility in Obermehler, Thuringia, another former East German town.

According to Funck, Rosskopf & Partner AG has grown steadily over the past 20 years, basing its growth strategy on automation, technological innovation and strict quality standards. The firm now has about 180 employees, sales equivalent to $38M per year, and exports nearly 50% of its production.

After recounting his company’s impressive history, Funck got into the exciting part – a description of recent projects that feature world-class modern architecture and extensive use of precisely thermoformed solid surface components. Two in particular caught my attention.

First is the Hotel Puerta America, built in Madrid, Spain. Amazingly, each floor is designed by a world-class architect, and is thoroughly modern and completely different from the other floors. Fifteen design firms collaborated, and six specified extensive use of solid surface materials. For example, Iraqi-born architect Zia Hadid clad the majority of the surfaces she designed with swooping curves of solid surface materials that form walls, furniture, bath fixtures and even part of the ceilings.

Other floors were designed by British architects David Chipperfield and Kathryn Findlay, Ron Arad, who is an Israeli native, Jean Nouvel of France and March Newson of Australia. Many of the surfaces were jet black or bright red, and anyone who has experience with thermoforming knows that working with such intense colors requires the highest standards of quality control. Materials were furnished by LG Hi-Macs, and Rosskopf & Partner AG did all of the fabrication.

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