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American Standard Companies Inc. was a manufacturer of heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems, plumbing fixtures, and automotive parts. The company was formed in 1929 through the merger of the American Radiator Company and Standard Sanitary Manufacturing Company forming the American Radiator and Standard Sanitary Corporation .
Bain Capital created American Standard Americas from the North American units of the bath and kitchen business units acquired from American Standard Companies. [2] Bain sold a majority stake in American Standard Americas to Sun Capital Partners on November 27, 2007. [3] In February 2008, American Standard Americas merged with two other plumbing ...
Named after Cleveland's 49th mayor, United States Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare and Federal appeals judge Anthony J. Celebrezze, the Federal Building is typical of the modern, commercial office buildings of the 1960s. It displays strength in design through a purity and rich variety of materials.
American Standard Companies, a former global manufacturer, predecessor of Trane American Standard Insurance Company, a subsidiary of American Family Insurance American Standard, a brand of plumbing fixtures made by American Standard Brands
In 1984 the company came back under the control of American Standard. Bath production using acrylic resin started in 1986. [19] In 1996, the company Sanifrance was created by the combination of activities of Idéal Standard, Porcher, Piel, and Emafrance as a subsidiary of American Standard.
Ideal Standard is a privately held multinational plumbing fixture company headquartered in Belgium. Operating primarily in Latin America and Europe , the brand dates back to 1949, when it was used to brand fixtures of the foreign operations of the American Standard group . [ 1 ]
200 Public Square is a skyscraper in Cleveland, Ohio. The building, located on Public Square in Downtown Cleveland, reaches 45 stories and 658 feet (201 m) with 1.2 million square feet (110,000 m 2) of office space. It is the third-tallest building in Cleveland and fourth-tallest in the state of Ohio.
In 1980, Armitage Shanks was purchased by Blue Circle Industries, and in February 1999, Blue Circle sold its bathroom division (consisting of Armitage Shanks and the Italian Ceramica Dolomite) to United States based American Standard Companies for US$430 million.