Two long-standing partners in the architectural envelope market – Architectural Fabrication and Armetco Systems – have officially merged, creating a unified platform designed to expand national-scale capabilities in architectural cladding, fabrication, and specialty aluminum systems.
The merger builds on years of collaboration between the two companies, formalising an alignment that leadership describes as the “next step” in delivering more consistent and scalable service to customers across the U.S. market. Jeff Cash will remain in place as CEO and “integrator,” while Jeff Kenny continues as owner and “visionary,” supporting the group’s strategic direction and long-term growth.
According to Cash, bringing both operations under one structure strengthens the company’s ability to respond faster and with deeper technical support across complex projects. The goal is to enhance speed, reliability, and execution capacity, especially as façade packages continue to demand higher levels of coordination, production control, and system integration.
New Leadership Structure to Support Growth
Alongside the merger, several leadership appointments signal a clear push toward structured expansion and stronger market reach:
- Ryan Martin, formerly president of Armetco Systems, has been appointed Global Chief Sales Officer, overseeing sales strategy across Architectural Fabrication, Armetco Systems, and Alumination Architectural Products.
- Scott Stewart was named Vice President of Sales for both Armetco Systems and Alumination Architectural Products, reinforcing commercial alignment across the portfolio.
- Kevin Wampler will manage operations and production across the combined manufacturing platforms as Vice President of Operations, focusing on performance, efficiency, and delivery.
Expanded Offering Through Alumination Architectural Products
A key part of this unified platform is Alumination Architectural Products, a distributor known for specialty wood-look planks, battens, and architectural cladding profiles, a segment seeing growing demand as designers seek the warmth of timber aesthetics combined with the durability and low maintenance of aluminum.
Company officials confirmed that the merger will not impact existing customer relationships, active contracts, or project teams. For clients, the transition is expected to maintain continuity while unlocking stronger production depth and a broader systems offering moving forward.
Source: USGlassMag with additional information added by Glass Balkan