Tate celebrates 50 years in the access floor industry

HomeNewsTate celebrates 50 years in the access floor industry

Jessup, Md.—Tate is celebrating 50 years in the access floor industry. Tate Architectural Products Company (TAPCO) was formed in 1963 and, that same year, designed a steel panel for the new access floor industry. The following year, the newly designed steel panels were released to the market and the first panels were sold to the Naval Facility Computer Room in Norfolk, Va.

In the early 1960s, raised access flooring was introduced to large mainframe computer rooms as a means to manage cable and power distribution. While the use of raised floors in mission-critical facilities continued to grow, the systems were not often specified for offices until the early 1980s, followed by a General Services Administration (GSA) adoption and mandate.

The introduction of the U.S. Green Building Council’s (USGBC) Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) rating system further demonstrated the many environmental benefits of access floors, particularly underfloor air distribution. Today, approximately 25% of all office buildings and nearly 90% of all data centers in the U.S. are built with raised floors.

Tate’s Jessup, Md., manufacturing facility that now houses the company’s headquarters was built in 1965 and, in 1985, the company name changed from TAPCO to Tate Access Floors, before being purchased by the Kingspan Group PLC in 2001. Today, Tate is the largest raised access floor manufacturer in North America and has supplied more than 600 million square feet of raised floor in commercial office buildings, educational facilities, data centers and clean rooms around the world.

“The fact that raised floor installations have increased during one of the largest downturns in commercial construction history is no coincidence,” said Donal Curtin, Tate’s general manager. “The design/construction community is building offices today using more flexible and environmentally friendly solutions. Raised floors with underfloor air and service distribution complement this strategy by helping accommodate unknown future change and reducing the overall carbon footprint of the building.”

In the 50 years since Tate entered the access floor industry, the company’s commitment to engineering and product development has resulted in an impressive list of industry firsts. Introduced in 1981, ConCore access floor panels were the first steel welded panels filled with lightweight cement. In 1998, the company introduced Integral Trim, the first edge treatment to keep HPI laminates from cracking when laminated to a raised floor. Another first—GrateAire—came to market in 2001 as the first high-volume airflow panel for data centers.

Tate’s more recent industry firsts have helped launch the company on a path to becoming an underfloor service distribution and airflow management solutions provider. DirectAire, the first directional airflow panel for data centers, was introduced in 2010, along with SmartAire, the industry’s first variable air volume damper for data centers. In 2011, Tate brought to market the first hydronic perimeter heating and cooling solution for underfloor air distribution—the In-Floor Chilled Beam—and last year, the company introduced EcoCore, the first panel with phase change material that absorbs solar energy.

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