Bemis Manufacturing Company

The Bemis Manufacturing Company is an American manufacturing company based in Sheboygan Falls, Wisconsin and is best known for its toilet seat products. Bemis also manufactures plastic lawn, commercial, and indoor furniture, suction canisters, sharps containers, fluid management systems, gas caps, gauges and various contracted extrusion and injection molded plastic parts for companies such as John Deere and Whirlpool Corporation. The company is a pioneer of co-injection molding, a process in which virgin resin is injected with scrap plastic.[1]

Bemis Manufacturing Company
Private
IndustryInjection Molding, Molded Wood
Founded1901
FounderAlbert Bemis / Arthur White
Headquarters,
Key people
Norm Giertz, COO/President
Websitewww.bemismfg.com

Bemis's plastic work has won awards in the SPI Structural Plastics Div. design competition, particularly with the John Deere 7000 tractor, which is believed to represent the first instance of coinjection molding "to large parts where a recycled engineering material (ABS) is used in the core".[2][3][4]

History

In 1901, Arthur White incorporated White Wagon Works in Sheboygan Falls, Wisconsin, the precursor to Bemis that produced children's wooden wagons with a patented steering device. In the early 1920s, Al Bemis, with partner George Riddel, bought the majority of shares of White Wagon works and by 1928, Al Bemis took controlling interest in their shared company. In 1932, Bemis started producing toilet seats. By 1935, they started making seats for nearby Kohler Company.

Management

Bemis CEO and part-owner Peter Bemis was inducted into the Plastics Hall of Fame on June 19, 2006 for innovative techniques for co-injection and other advance molding processes.[5]

In June 2019, Jeff Lonigro was named as its new president and chief executive officer.[6] Lonigro comes to the plastics and consumer goods manufacturer from Trilliant Food and Nutrition in Little Chute where he was vice president. Prior to joining Trilliant he spent 20 years at Illinois Tool Works, including as group president for the industrial welding platform.[7]

Products

Bemis Manufacturing Company is best known for its toilet seat products, which are produced under the Bemis, Church, Mayfair, Westport and Olsonite[8] brands. While Olsonite is found primarily in wholesale markets, Mayfair and Westport are found in retail stores such as Ace Hardware, Bed Bath & Beyond, Meijer and Do-It Best. Bemis and Church branded seats can be found in both wholesale markets and in retailers such as Home Depot, Lowe's and home improvement retailers in the UK including Homebase. Bemis also produces bathroom accessories in Europe under the Carrara & Matta brand.[9]

Bemis produces custom plastics products for customers in commercial furniture, agricultural equipment, appliances, yard care, retail facility, and industrial products industries. Using technologies such as co-injection molding and extrusion, Bemis works with business partners to design and produce their products.[9]

Since 1971, Bemis has produced various products for disposal of medical wastes, including sharps containers, suction canisters and liners, and a draining system for safe liquid management.[9]

Awards

  • 2012 - Bemis was among three finalists in the 16th Plastics News' Processor of the Year Award.[10]
  • 2011 - The Target shopping cart, molded by Bemis, was a finalist in the Industrial Design Excellence Awards (IDEA)[11]
  • 2009 - Bemis Manufacturing won the 2009 International Plastics Design Competition Retail Award for the Target shopping cart.[12]
  • 2007 - Bemis Manufacturing took top honors at the SPI 2007 Alliance of Plastics Processors Awards for a high-end clothes dryer door window.[13]
  • 2006 - Bemis Manufacturing's Advance Technology Group won a Judges's award for the Sub Compact Utility Tractor and 9th Annual Industrial Designers Society of America/Plastics News Award for the John Deere Series 8000 Engine Enclosure.[14]
gollark: Oh, it also says it's done 25.4TB of reads and 17.4TB of writes.
gollark: Hmm, apparently "elements in grown defect list" is "bad blocks" and this is actually quite bad, fun.
gollark: It has 68513 hours of power on time, 1986 power on/off cycles out of a rated 10000, and 4 "elements in grown defect list".
gollark: Ah, according to the data I got off it, my drive was manufactured in 2012. Which is something like threeish years after the server came into existence, as far as I know.
gollark: Also, there was some admittedly small-scale testing by some computer review company and SSDs could mostly go significantly beyond their endurance ratings and manage hundreds of terabytes written. But also did tend to fail suddenly and inexplicably instead of having a graceful failure.

References

  1. Bregar, Bill. (June 19, 2006). Bemis emphasizes value of continuous reinvention Plastic News. Accessed October 26, 2007.
  2. Knights, Mikell. (June 2004) Structural plastics exploring ways to make molds & parts faster Plastics Technology Online. Accessed October 26, 2007.
  3. Plastic industry honors innovative parts Archived December 3, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. MachineDesign.com (May 6, 2004). Accessed October 26, 2007.
  4. Custom Plastic Extrusion. lakelandplastics.com. Accessed September 15, 2015.
  5. SPI: Southern Region
  6. Bemis. "Bemis Manufacturing Company Announces Appointment of New CEO". www.prnewswire.com. Retrieved 2020-02-25.
  7. "Bemis Manufacturing names new CEO". BizTimes Media Milwaukee. 2019-06-20. Retrieved 2019-06-24.
  8. Bemis acquired Olsonite in 2005. Olsonite Bemis Manufacturing Company.
  9. "Our family of brands". Bemis Mannufacturing. Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  10. Milacron’s big move: As customers rebound, relationships pay off
  11. "International Design Excellence Awards". www.dexigner.com.
  12. 2009 International Plastics Design Competition Retail Award Archived May 1, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  13. SPI 2007 Alliance of Plastics Processors Awards Archived August 7, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  14. SPI 2006 Alliance of Plastics Processors Awards Archived August 4, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
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