Napier, MSCNewsWire, Tuesday 31 May 2016 -With its Ecolux system for windows, Solar Gard steps up its light/ heat control management series reducing both summer and winter energy consumption and at the same time enhancing productive sector safe-working both on the factory floor and in administration blocks.
In winter, the system retains heat and reflects it back into interior spaces. In summer, it reflects and deflects the solar heat that strikes windows, which means lower energy consumption for air conditioning.
Equally important, and often overlooked by productive sector management is that the application of Solar Gard boosts worker safety through UV protection and glare minimisation.
Solar Gard protection is as important in its way as the proper provision of safety glasses and shields.
Solar Gard films stop more than 99 percent of harmful ultraviolet rays. As a result of this property, the films have gained the endorsement of the American Skin Cancer Foundation. The films also reduce furniture and furnishing fading indoors.
Solar Gard’s work in photo voltaics is well known in terms of renewable electricity generation. But the increasing application of the films in anti-glare and anti UV protection for employees is becoming standard with the increased nationwide sensitivity to health and safety at work standards.
The Solar Gard series is manufactured internationally by St Gobain the French multinational which is also the world’s longest continuously operating manufacturer having been founded in France in 1665.
The Solar Gard range is distributed in New Zealand by SWF Distribution of Auckland which anticipated the enhanced awareness of glare and UV problems, along with the dismayingly increasing costs of factory temperature control costs.
SWF Distribution is the New Zealand distributor for Solar Gard window film, window insulation and custom coating products. Led by co-directors Ross Eathorne and Jill Newth (pictured) SWF Distribution took Sola Gard beyond aesthetic applications and into the now-critical areas of productive sector temperature management and health & safety considerations.
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