AISC Certification Awarded to AT&F
The fabricator can now work on bridge projects requiring special wider-spanned girders requiring an extremely large press brake for cold-forming.
Posted: May 13, 2015
AT&F (Cleveland, OH), one of the world’s leading large-scale metal fabricators, has been awarded certification by the American Institute of Skilled Construction (AISC). This now allows the fabricator to perform work on a variety of bridge projects requiring an AISC-certified contractor and expands the ways in which the company can serve its customers.
“We want to be able to build components for accelerated bridge construction projects for our customers, and this certification will help us deliver,” says Paul Horbaly, the business development representative at AT&F. “Each state’s Department of Transportation requires AISC certified suppliers for bridge components as the nation rebuilds our structurally deficient infrastructure.”
This certification lets customers know that the company has met and exceeded AISC’s rigorous quality-control specifications. AT&F applied for the certification in November 2014 and received it following a series of audits and document reviews to ensure it has the systems and processes in place to merit certification. With AISC certification, the fabricator can put its big capabilities to work in new ways on bridge projects requiring greater spans than previously available in the bridge girder market. These specialized girders require an extremely large press brake to cold-form the bridge girders.
“We have some of the largest capacity and most advanced equipment in the industry to handle all of our customers’ needs,” Horbaly said. “We have a 60 ft long single-ram press brake with a 2,800 ton capacity, which is unique in our space. It is the largest of its kind in the world. We can offer services to our customers they can’t get anywhere else.”
AT&F chief executive officer Michael Ripich said the AISC certification will help the company bring innovation to an industry looking for fabricators with new capabilities. “We are excited to offer large fabrication expertise honed over 75 years in the heavy industrial and defense markets to bridge designers and builders,” he said. “The bridge construction industry is looking for innovation. We are the source for big innovation.”