Effective Aug. 19, Acme Brick sales offices in Texas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma are offering DuPont’s™ ArmorWall™ Plus Fire-Rated Structural Insulated Sheathing (FR SIS) for commercial buildings.
Acme's Pelham location has the largest brick and tile showroom in the Birmingham area serving seven counties and the surrounding areas. Many of our products can be seen on the most prominent residential and commercial buildings in the area. Our 4,000-square-foot showroom displays a large selection of brick samples, natural stone, simulated stone, limestone fireplace surrounds, Isokern fireplaces, clay and concrete pavers, and patio products. In addition, we have a top-of-the-line flooring showroom with ceramic and porcelain tile, hardwood floors, natural stone and also install granite, marble, limestone and quartz countertops. We also carry all the tools, supplies and cleaners/sealers necessary for your job. Come visit us today and let our in-house design professionals assist you with your project.
Effective Aug. 19, Acme Brick sales offices in Texas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma are offering DuPont’s™ ArmorWall™ Plus Fire-Rated Structural Insulated Sheathing (FR SIS) for commercial buildings.
(Photo credit: Aeman/Adobe Stock)
(Photo credit: Scott-Adobe Stock)
If it’s true that “one picture is worth a thousand words,” then a remarkable video must be worth considerably more. As wildfires race across the western United States, from California to the Midwest to Texas, and hurricanes wreak havoc in areas near the Gulf of Mexico, now is a good time to take a moment and watch this brief video below. It takes less than 5 minutes to watch, but the message may stay with you for a lifetime.
Acme Brick Company is one of only twenty-five companies nationwide that have received David Weekley Homes’ 2024 nationally acclaimed “Partners of Choice Award.”
In 1988, two physics professors began discussing the scientific components that might lead to better energy efficiency in building construction. Bo Adamson from Lund University in Sweden and Wolfgang Feist from the Institut für Wohnen und Umwelt in Germany had read the research, dating back to the 1970s, that suggested it was possible to construct a low-energy building that was designed to exploit passive solar technologies and establish a comfortable indoor temperature with a low-energy requirement for heating or cooling.