In a separate statement, AHF Products has finalized the planned closing of its Oneida, Tennessee, facility, a small facility which manufactures floor cleaners.
All the news shows there’s a slowdown in the residential sector, but speaking to industry leaders—retail, distribution and manufacturing—tells me that getting serious about strategy might make it all okay.
Floor Trends interviewed AHF President Brian Carson to find out what the acquisition means for the future of AHF Products, the legacy of the Armstrong brand, and what’s next for flooring technologies.
AHF Products announced that it has closed the purchase of certain assets of Armstrong Flooring, Inc., including the rights to license the Armstrong Flooring brand name as well as the purchase of three U.S. manufacturing facilities, in Lancaster and Beech Creek, Pennsylvania, and in Kankakee, Illinois.
A bankruptcy judge cleared a final hurdle Friday morning for the sale of Armstrong Flooring’s North American assets to a group led by Mountville, Pennsylvania-based AHF Products, and by Friday evening the companies said the deal should close Monday.
The purchase includes the purchase and operation of three U.S. manufacturing facilities, in Lancaster and Beech Creek, Pennsylvania, and in Kankakee, Illinois.
Beginning today until June 30, 2020 all consumer samples are free to consumers through AHF trade partners. New online room visualizers, available now for Bruce, Hartco and Robbins floors, can be a valuable resource to help consumers make the right flooring choice.
To help mitigate the potential spread of the virus and in accordance with the Governor’s order, employees at AHF Products' headquarters in Mountville, PA, are working remotely.