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Decorative surfaces and components for commercial furniture, fixtures and millwork, as a category, probably include more material options and combinations than any other interior application. While this increases designers’ options for value engineering great visuals without sacrificing performance, safety, and positive climate-health and human-health impacts, it can also cause confusion leading to application fails or budget overruns.
This is why, when writing and keynoting your specifications, it’s important to indicate not only the product and supplier, but the unique design and performance characteristics that made it your first choice for each application.
Solid wood, wood veneers and decorative metals are all fairly well understood. Their design and performance properties are largely determined by each supplier or fabricator and vary greatly.
In the case of fixtures and millwork, these materials may also require specialized installation and even on-site finishing. Because there are so many variables, we’re going to set these materials aside for this discussion, except to say that a specifier’s relationships with these suppliers is critical to creating successful commercial solutions.
Instead, we’ll focus on a category of widely available engineered decorative surfaces that feature universal climate-positive benefits, some common design and material properties, and important differences in performance to match every application. For instance, you don’t need the same level of durability on a feature wall behind the check-in desk as you do in elevator cab, but you can have the same visuals.
The catchall term for this category is “laminates,” although that’s also where some of the confusion comes in because there are so many variations of this material. There are many commonalities and universal properties of engineered decorative surfaces, including:
From the Inside Out: Climate-Positive Substrates
Composite wood panels—particleboard, MDF, hardboard—are used in every commercial project, although they’re rarely called out in specifications unless certain properties are required, like fire or moisture resistance, lighter weight and so on.
All panels manufactured in North America do share one important benefit. They are naturally “climate positive,” meaning they go beyond achieving net zero carbon emissions, creating a measurable environmental benefit by removing more carbon dioxide from the atmosphere than is released in their production.
Clients and Consumers Love a Good Sustainability Story
Having a better understanding the inherent climate- and human-health positives of any decorative material that uses composite wood as a substrate will help you tell a deeper, more resonant sustainability story to your clients, who are eager to be able to tout their own planet- and people-friendly values to guests and tenants. Just ask Marriott.
In 2015, the company tested the value of telling their climate- and human-health story in a single Courtyard by Marriott hotel in California. Guests who scanned the “snap tag” code and interacted with the information about environmental and human health benefits about the furniture and materials products in the hotel reported a 150% higher satisfaction rate and were 150% more likely to return, compared to guests who stayed at the same property at the same time but did not scan the code.
Choose Design First, Material Second
When it comes to engineered decorative surface choices for furniture, fixtures, cabinets, millwork, and even ceiling and acoustically treated panels, it’s important to know that you can focus first on the design you want—a nearly unlimited palette of textured woodgrain and stone finishes, fantasy designs, branded digital prints or solid colors—and have that design delivered on a wide range of performance-engineered surfaces.
No other material category gives you this much flexibility to value engineer a project.
Unfortunately, these same advantages make it tempting for some manufacturers and contractors to swap out “like” designs on lower performing laminates to pad margins, avoid outsourcing or investing in newer technologies, or a reluctance to seek out new supplier relationships.
Being armed with the right information and terminology makes it much easier to find products that meet your exact specifications.
Get Exactly What You Specify: Material Rundown
Choose your design and texture palette first. Then choose the material based on the needed durability and performance. Nearly all companies selling the products described below participate in cross-referenced design matching programs and will gladly guide you to other materials to fully realize your value-engineering goals.
Typical applications: HPL has proven itself over decades of use on countertops, cabinet faces, elevator cabs, and other commercial-grade panels and dividers. A quality edgeband is critical for long-term durability.
Typical applications: TFL is found on commercial office desktops, hotel furniture and millwork, cabinet exteriors and interiors, organized storage systems, and is widely used in retail fixtures and furniture.
3DL panels have very high wear and abrasion resistance, and seamless edges that won’t delaminate. Because the surfaces are thermoplastic, impact damage might dent, but won't crack, 3DL faces.
Typical applications: The seamless surfaces of 3DL panels make them a great solution for healthcare, education and retail applications, where easy cleaning and surface integrity are paramount. The material’s ability to mold into carved MDF surface details has led to use on carved wall panels, hospital headwalls, and wayfinding and logo panels.
Typical applications: Traditionally lightweight overlays have been wrapped around moldings and other architectural millwork as a more durable and design-consistent alternative to solid wood and veneers. They’re a great alternative to veneered wall panels for the same reasons.
Typical applications: Because of its extreme durability, compact has long been used for building facades, lab tables and toilet partitions. More recently it is being specified for restaurant and outdoor café tables, conference tables, school furniture, and ramps in skateboard parks.
Universal Benefits
All of these engineered surfaces offer similar benefits for commercial interiors:
Make Use of Top (Unpaid) Material Consultants
With the exception of compact laminate and maybe HPL, you probably won’t be specifying these surfaces as a standalone material. They’ll be part of a finished component, fixture or piece of furniture. This means your spec rep is key to helping you make the right choices for your project and your clients’ goals.
“We actually have vendor appreciation events,” says Joy Lynskey, LEED AP, founder and creative director of Jewel Toned Interiors in Fort Lauderdale. Her firm’s corporate, healthcare, retail and hospitality projects come in all sizes and budgets and make use of many different kinds of materials.
“Reps, especially multiline reps, are huge for us,” says Lynskey. “They’ll have several solutions for each project, and most of them come prepared with value-engineered options. From the moment we have the budget conversation with the owner, our reps are ready to help.”
When specific materials are chosen, Lynskey uses keynotes in her “very robust” drawing sets to guard against substitution by contractors or fabricators.
“We make sure the client understands the reasoning behind every one of our decisions. We show them the intentionality of our design down to every small detail, making it much harder for anyone to change the spec.”
When necessary, Lynskey connects her reps directly with contractors and fabricators to solve any issues.
“It’s not our job to be the middleman. We try not to get into means and methods too much…we like to stay in our lane.”
Article provided by www.interiorsandsources.com, Must-Know Facts About Specifying Materials for Furniture, Fixtures and Millwork, May 20, 2020
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