Ottawa Citizen

New frame, Window 4.0, introduced

Vars-based Verdun introduces Window 4.0, the next generation of energy-efficient frame

- DEREK ABMA

Amazingly, although windows have been used in buildings since about AD 100, there have been only three iterations of basic window frame technology. The earliest builders in Roman times used wood frames, aluminum came into use in 1926, and then PVC frames in 1952.

A local window manufactur­er is breaking new ground with a stronger, more energy-efficient frame that’s poised to become the standard in the near future. Verdun Windows & Doors is a Vars-based operation that’s been serving the Ottawa region since 1982, The company calls the product Window 4.0.

This new type of window is called RevoCell. It uses what’s known as microcellu­lar polyvinyl chloride (mPVC), a super-dense version of the more common PVC plastic.

This year, Verdun became the first window maker in Canada to put such a product on the market.

“A lot of companies have worked over the last 10 years to try to bring this product to the window business, and they weren’t able to do it,” said Eric Pham-dinh, chief marketing officer at Verdun, crediting his company’s “relentless R&D” for making it happen.

Verdun predicts that mPVC will become the norm for windows in the homeowner replacemen­t market within five years and for home builders within 10 years.

Verdun marketing director Jimm Fox said the RevoCell window “is really a game-changer for our industry” and no less than “revolution­ary.”

“It’s really, really energy-efficient,” Fox said. “It’s got the highest energy rating in its class.”

Natural Resources Canada rated the RevoCell double-pane casement window the most energyeffi­cient product of its type in the country this year.

“Our new RevoCell window can save a homeowner hundreds of dollars a year in energy costs,” Fox said.

There are a few reasons for this, he said, one being that the dense plastic used in these frames is better at insulating homes from the outside, meaning less work for your furnace or air conditione­r. As well, because it’s stronger, the frame doesn’t need to be as big, meaning there’s more glass to allow for more sunlight.

“When you look at the window from the inside or the outside, you have less material,” Pham-dinh said. “Depending on the size of the window, you can get up to 20 per cent more light.”

He said these windows are expected to last longer than the 20 years or so that’s the typical replacemen­t time for most windows.

Despite these benefits, Verdun is offering RevoCell windows for the same price as regular PVC windows, which can range from hundreds of dollars for small basement windows to more than $1,000 for large bay windows. It also comes with the same 20-year warranty.

Pham-dinh said the company wants this product to be attainable “for regular homeowners, not just the elite — and if we’re able to maintain that price, we definitely will.”

When asked why anyone would still want a window framed with standard PVC when they can get mPVC for the same price, Fox laughed and said: “Can you put that in your article, please?”

Pham-dinh said since making RevoCell windows widely available within the last few months, they already account for most of the windows Verdun sells.

RevoCell windows are available in all sizes. Certain styles, such as sliders and hung windows (those that open vertically) are not yet available in RevoCell, but Phamdinh said the company is working on it.

The vast majority of Verdun’s customers are homeowners seeking replacemen­t windows. Phamdinh said the company made a decision about 20 years ago to focus on this market as opposed to home builders because the latter tend to want lower-cost components that are, inevitably, of lesser quality. Larger-scale producers tend to serve the builders’ market, he said.

He said that’s partly why mPVC windows are expected to take over the homeowners’ market before the builders’ market.

“I think as more companies produce microcellu­lar PVC windows, we’re going see some terms of scale and the price of windows will continue to be as efficient as possible,” Pham-dinh said.

“We’re the largest replacemen­twindow company in the country, but we’re not the largest manufactur­er. There are some very large manufactur­ers in North America. … We’re seeing today that energy efficiency has become more and more important to consumers, and the demand from the consumer will work its way through to large manufactur­ers. As people build houses and buy houses, and they’ll want a better product from a window perspectiv­e.”

 ?? JEAN LEVAC ?? Eric Pham-dinh, left and Jimm Fox of Verdun Windows & Doors, which has been serving the Ottawa region since 1982. Fox calls the RevoCell product an industry “game-changer.”
JEAN LEVAC Eric Pham-dinh, left and Jimm Fox of Verdun Windows & Doors, which has been serving the Ottawa region since 1982. Fox calls the RevoCell product an industry “game-changer.”
 ?? VERDUN WINDOWS & DOORS ?? The Vars-based Verdun plant. The company predicts mPVC will become the norm for windows in the homeowner replacemen­t market within five years..
VERDUN WINDOWS & DOORS The Vars-based Verdun plant. The company predicts mPVC will become the norm for windows in the homeowner replacemen­t market within five years..

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