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Some are forecasting just 35,000 units for 2008. It's a big drop,
but that is still more
than twice the rate per person we build in the UK. The market
is expected to pick up
in the second half of 2008.
Despite current market weakness, construction is a more important
part of the
economy than in the UK. Apartments, houses, offices, business
parks, warehouses,
roads and flyovers are being built everywhere. Irish building
related firms have
prospered in Ireland and expanded in the UK and Europe.
National Profiles builds to keep customers growing
I met Paul O'Sullivan, Managing Director of National Profiles
Ltd, Ireland's leading
profile distributor to see for myself how the market has changed
and to hear how he
expects it to develop. National Profiles distributes profile for
System 10, Ultraframe
and Smart Systems and has recently taken on the distribution for
Spectus, North
and South of the Border. We met as a smart new business park,
distribution centre
and offices was being built across the road from the existing
premises to ensure the
company could continue its record of substantial growth.
The impressive development is in Mallow, County Cork. For efficiency,
traffic is
one-way through the new centre to simplify and speed up loading
of its articulated
trucks. The new premises will also help to future-proof the distributor
by providing
the facilities and space to handle the fast changing profile and
product mix.
"Northern Ireland took longer to respond to the Peace Dividend,"
Paul O'Sullivan
explains, "but its growth has been faster than the rest of
the UK in the last ten years.
The biggest barrier now is the Irish Sea, which we do have to
take account of -
poor weather disrupts sea crossings. Because of disruptions to
supply, we carry
a lot of stock so our customers can fabricate whatever the weather.
We carry large volumes of profile for other reasons too.
"Colour is a high proportion of a fabricator's business
with around 50% of total frames
supplied, North and South, in a wide variety of colours, including
red, blue, green,
grey, black and brown, as well woodgrains and more subtle shades.
If we supply 12
or more colours in addition to white, we have to carry all the
associated profiles and
components for the different types of windows and doors in each
colour. That's a lot!
Colour could grow from 50% to 70%!
"The swing to colour is continuing. Many think it could
hit 70% quite quickly.
Five years ago it was 20%, similar to Scotland, but people got
tired of white for
everything, and installers realised that homeowners would pay
more for colour if
they were given a choice, so it's a big opportunity."
Colour is growing quickly in the UK, although it is some way
behind Ireland,
but for the same reasons I believe it is likely to go the same
way.
"Our service and support has to be as good as a systems
company's,"
Paul continued. "We are expected to trouble shoot as well
as support them in
winning new business and specifications across Ireland.
Our support is what a fabricator would expect from a premium systems
company.
Reversibles and vertical sliders growing too
"Increasingly Ireland is becoming a single market, with
benefits all around.
Many of our customers are in the North. Through them for example
we are a major
supplier of two reversible windows to the Northern Ireland Housing
Executive.
The window market is not the same as in the UK, although the Scottish
market is
also different, but the markets are converging in many respects.
Vertical sliders are growing and may also be a relatively bigger
market than in the UK.
"We calculate that around 70,000 windows and doors a week
were manufactured
and imported into Ireland during 2006. This dropped back to 60,000
units a week in
2007, although we have not yet finalised the figures. Nearly 80%
is PVC-U, 12-15%
aluminium and the rest is timber and aluminium-wood composites.
The figures exclude curtain walling and shop fronts, which are
nearly all aluminium.

~ Paul drives the company forward ~
A market with lots of scope to grow
"The North accounts for around 25% of windows and doors
installed, but it produces
perhaps 35% of total frames made by large fabricators such as
Camden, Superseal
and Dessian. Ireland is not big compared to the British window
and door market, but
it has considerable scope for growth. Saturation is relatively
low at around 50%,
compared with the 85% or so for the UK.
On the way to No.1
"Our calculations show that National Profiles had about
12% market share in 2007
based on tonnage to manufacture windows and doors. We expect this
to have
increased to over 15% by the end of 2008 with growth from Spectus
and System 10.
That would put us in third position by tonnage alongside Camden
and Munster Joinery,
although as both of them are manufacturers that would make us
the No.1 distributor
in Ireland."
For further information contact Paul O'Sullivan - Tel: 00353
225 0100
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