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FOUNDED - December 1958 in Buffalo,
New York. Incorporated in the State of New York - Certificate
issued in May 1959. Filed and received Tax Exempt status in
1965.
AIMS & PURPOSES - The aims and
purposes of the Association are to protect, foster and advance
the interests of the industry; prepare and disseminate
information regarding the proper construction and maintenance of
glazed enclosures, greenhouses and sunspaces in varying climatic
areas; promote and maintain friendly relationships between
companies in the industry and between industry members and the
customers; to interchange ideas for the benefit of the industry;
to improve manufacturing procedures wherever possible; to
explore markets for additional products which could be marketed
and/or manufactured during off-season periods; to prepare
informative data for the use of persons and companies interested
in entering the growing field; and, to generally do such things
which may be found necessary to accomplish the above aims.
STANDARDS - The original Structural
Standards were written by Bill Roberts of Lord and Burnham. In
order to get recognition of these, the firm of Wiss, Janney and
Elster Associates was retained to put the standards in shape to
present to ANSI in October 1974. This task was finally completed
in October 1981 and the Standards were printed in quantity to be
distributed. At that time, a heat-loss standard had been
approved. The cooling and ventilating standard written by Norm
Augsburger and Harold Gray had been published and copyrighted in
1962. A statement of policy on retrofit had been adopted. These
were all included in the Structural Standard booklet. PERIOD
1986 - 1990. During this period considerable activity took
place. Following a meeting with the Sunspace Council in the Fall
of 1984, the Residential Sunspace/ Greenhouse manufacturers
chose to join NGMA rather than continue a separate organization.
The By-laws were changed to recognize a separate division for
them. This resulted in a big upswing in the membership. With
their vote NGMA joined GICC in 1986 and stayed a member through
1990 because of common interests. The first year's dues were
$3300, but continually increased to $5400 the last year. It was
during that period that NGMA retained BTI as code consultants to
propose changes in the three model Building Codes - NBC (BOCA),
UBC (ICBO), and SBC (SBCCI), to recognize greenhouses in the
codes. Dave Hattis of BTI and Harold Gray spent two years
traveling all over the country to present the code changes.
The NGMA worked closely with GICC since they
were working on changes in glazing - NGMA supported their
proposals and the GICC supported the NGMA. As a result, changes
in structural for greenhouses were made in BOCA (NBC) in 1988
and in UBC and SBC in 1989. At the same time these model codes
accepted annealed glass for greenhouses under certain
limitations, and tempered glass in solariums and sun spaces
under certain limitations which GICC had proposed.
Following the accomplishment of these, the "residential"
membership began to lose interest in the NGMA. The NGMA
continued working with GICC in input to ICBO which was
developing an Acceptance Criteria for sloped glazing in
solariums - the original of which
would seriously curtail the market for solariums, some success
was in evidence in the final document published in 1990 - it was
strict, but livable for solarium manufacturers. With the
satisfaction of the most pressing desires of the residential
members, they began to depart the NGMA as evidenced by a drop in
membership in 1991. Despite dropping out of
GICC at the end of 1990, the NGMA continued to work with GICC in
the area of ASHRAE Proposed Energy Standard #90.2P on
Energy-Efficient Design of New Low-Rise Residential Buildings.
The original called for a prescriptive treatment for
calculations of energy requirements which would have effectively
eliminated the use of sunspaces or solariums in residential
construction.
The NGMA continued to work with the GICC.
The resulting Standards 90.2 published by ASHRAE in 1993 allows
a "tradeoff" method of calculating energy loss as an alternative
to the "prescriptive" method. COPYRIGHTS
- Following the acceptance of the Wiss, Janney Standard, the
entire
Standards booklet was submitted for copyright, and the copyright
was granted in 1985. GLAZING STANDARDS
- In 1987, the glazing committee presented a Glazing Standard to
the group which was approved - a copyright application was filed
and copyright received in March 1987.
REVISIONS - Following the acceptance of code changes by BOCA
in 1985, with the help of BTI, revisions were made in the
structural standards to conform with BOCA. Since they were
revisions, they were still covered under copyright. Heat loss
standards were revised in 1989 to include the newer plastic
double-skin sheet glazing materials - covered under copyright as
revisions. MISCELLANEOUS INSIGHTS -
The NGMA distributes a quarterly e-newsletter to our membership.
The newsletter includes information of past and future NGMA
meetings, trade journal monthly editorial content, trade events
and articles that are directed for manufacturers of greenhouses
and their components. SURVEYS - The
NGMA conducts an annual survey of on glazing and structures,
which is distributed to all survey participants.
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