Launch Slideshow

Drywall Art from Trim-Tex

The Trim-Tex headquarters is more than corporate offices - it's a studio for trying out new products

Drywall Art from Trim-Tex

The Trim-Tex headquarters is more than corporate offices - it's a studio for trying out new products

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    No plain old drop ceilings in the Trim-Tex offices. The drywall accessories manufacturer uses its staff offices as canvases for trying out new products, techniques, and designs. The geometric designs around this ceiling are made entirely of drywall and Trim-Tex edge pieces, and incorporates accent lighting for a dramatic effect.
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    Constructed entirely of drywall, this dramatic wave ceiling was used in a Trim-Tex promotion, then transplanted to the manufacturing facility's break room. Trim-Tex president Joe Koenig says having the ceiling built out in the break room helps boost the mood for employees, and reminds them what kind of flexible, unique products they're making.
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    Remodelers can create their own unique crown moldings by incorporating a range of Trim-Tex corner beads.
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    Trim-Tex materials aren't just for use around the ceiling. This desk, including the legs, is built out of drywall with Trim-Tex products finsihing the curves and smoothing the corners. This photo also gives a view of the Trim-Tex Design & Training Center. The space features several vignettes outfitted with different uses of the Trim-Tex product to show installers the scope of what the product can do. Still under construction, Trim-Tex will hold seminars and training events in the Design & Training Center upon its completion.

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    Applying Trim-Tex material around a doorway gives the space the look of routed woodwork. The effect gives installers the ability to create wainscoting, cornices, and other interior trim pieces without elaborate woodworking equipment.
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    A closeup view of the installed, unfinished Trim-Tex product. Staples hold the flexible edging in place beneath drywall mud that finishes the look.
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    Window casing is another opportunity to incorporate drywall instead of woodworking.
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    Flexible Trim-Tex curves in ways that wood often can't. Elaborate ceiling effects are made easier than building out spaces with lumber.

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    Even scrap layers of drywall can be put to use with Trim-Tex. Attractive ceiling medallions, wall art, and other effects can be constructed out of materials that would otherwise be tossed in the trash and taken to a landfill.

It’s a commodity product used on almost every remodel ever performed, but drywall isn’t just the stuff that hides the studs and insulation. Joe Koenig knows this, but wants to spread the word to the rest of the industry.

“There’s no creativity left in drywall,” says Koenig, president of Chicago-area drywall products manufacturer Trim-Tex. “Now it’s all about who can slap up the board the cheapest. We’re fighting to change that mentality.”

Though worn down by the economic downturn like most other companies, Trim-Tex is poised for growth, and Koenig is thrilled with the opportunities his products can afford remodelers. “We’ve had the same challenges as others in the last three years, but what’s motivating me right now is the desire to hire back some people we had to lay off,” he says. “We’re growing, we’re expanding our facility, and we’re ready to be the best of the best.”

Arts in (Drywall) Education

When Koenig says Trim-Tex is growing, he means it. From its front door in an area of suburban Chicago, you wouldn’t think the building spans 225,000-square-feet of manufacturing, marketing, and research and development space. In addition to staff offices and production lines, the headquarters house a 76,000-square-foot shipping facility that handles 30,000 orders annually. Beyond that, crews are hard at work finishing an 8,000-square-foot design and training center for contractor education.

“For the last 20 years, we’ve been motivated by wanting homeowners to live in beautiful homes,” Koenig says. “We really look at what we offer as ‘Drywall Art,’ and we’re opening this design and training center as a place to offer seminars for dealers and contractors.”

On its websites www.trim-tex.com and www.drywallart.com, and soon in its training center, Trim Tex highlights how its products give installers the flexibility to go beyond a basic 4x8 sheet of drywall and instead use the material to create everything from wall accents to ceiling effects to desks and headboards. The Trim-Tex products themselves are similar to corner bead installed where two pieces of drywall meet, but more advanced and stylized.

“Our core message is that we have ‘10 ways to finish your corner,’” Koenig says, though that number (which should actually be 12), doesn’t include products that aren’t specifically corner pieces. The product line includes a range of bullnose corner sizes, chamfer beads, and decorative edges that, in combination, yield countless creative opportunities for finishing walls and surfaces.

Affordable Luxury

Many Trim-Tex’s customers take full advantage of the Drywall Art concept, going beyond simple wall accents to create elaborate living spaces in their clients homes, all with drywall. The company even holds an annual Drywall Artist of the Year contest, popular among its clients. While many of these installations require much more drywall than needed to finish an average room, Koenig says the products are inexpensive compared to building out similar details with lumber. He adds that small projects and accents can actually help contractors reduce waste on jobsites by utilizing drywall scrap that would otherwise head to the landfill.

“We always love to see what our customers do with these materials because it plays up an affordable luxury aspect of design,” Koenig says. “Good drywall art looks like routed woodwork, but you can offer it to the homeowner at a fraction of the price and give them something they wouldn’t think they could have in their home otherwise.”

Koenig says he and his staff have worked hard to fill the company websites with product information, installation videos, and galleries that offer inspiration for budding drywall artists. As more educational seminars get underway, he hopes additional dealers and customers will break into this affordable luxury artform.