| Posted : 08/01/2003
PORTABLE EQUAL$ AFFORDABLE
Todays Modular Walls Offer Many
Advantages To Standard Walls
by Scott Eric Barrett
Opening
a tanning salon or remodeling an established one takes a lot of energy,
creativity and money. One of the best ways to save cash without sacrificing
creativity is to use portable walls for individual tanning suites. An affordable
alternative to construction, portable wallsalso called modular wallseliminate
the need for contractors in most cases and reduce project time and cost.
These transportable solutions have several
advantages to conventional walls that weigh in differently in different
applications. They are much easier, quicker and less messy to install. They are
pre-engineered to a specific space so they will install without cutting,
plastering or painting. Besides those factors, what matters most to salon
operators often is appearance. Most modular wall systems offer dozens of color
options and design patterns.
Quality portable walls are made of medium-density
fiberboard (MDF) with a low-pressure laminate (LPL) finish. This construction
method is durable and minimizes wall thickness for a maximum number of rooms per
available square footage. The LPL finish is similar to that of office furniture
and countertops. It never needs painting and can be washed repeatedly without
damaging the surface, eliminating the need to ever re-finish the wall surface.
A single tanning room can generate between
$12,000 and $36,000 per year, says Rob Quinn, president of Huron, Ohio-based
Sunwalls. Using modular walls instead of conventional walls can easily add
tens of thousands of dollars to your gross sales simply by giving your salon
more capacity.
Marketing is the name of the game in the tanning
industry. When a customer walks into a nice-looking salon with great decor and a
clean environment, the chances of a quality first impression increase
dramatically. Besides a beautiful lobby that displays a salons finest
attributes, operators need to put a little creativity into their tanning suites.
Modular walls allow operators to customize room
sizes based on current equipment needs and future equipment changes. Oftentimes,
with conventional construction, rooms are built either too large or too small
for the ever-changing equipment mixes a store might go through.
If a salon operator wants to upgrade to a
better tanning bed, he or she has to tear down a wall just to take out the
outdated bed, move in the new bed and then build a new wall, says Kevin
Peithman, owner of Anaheim, Calif.-based TanWall. Building a wall requires
several crews including a framer, a drywall guru, a person to do the taping,
another to do the sanding and one more to do the painting, and thats not
including the electrician, who would have to run the wiring though the wall.
Another
principle advantage is that portable walls can be reconfigured to allow for
changes in equipment sizes without disrupting current business, Quinn says. Additionally,
these rooms always can be smaller than conventional construction because the
equipment can be installed prior to the erection of the walls. With conventional
construction, the rooms have to be large enough to assemble the beds inside the
rooms. In many cases, with larger beds, double doors have to be installed just
to physically get the bed components into the room. This is a non-issue with
modular walls.
Cleanliness and damage control are non-issues
too. Most systems feature panels that provide a tough coating, which allows
tanning products easily to be removed with standard household cleaners, says
David DiCristina, vice president of client services for Dallas, Ga.-based
T&R Fixtures. Salon owners have no need to paint or patch walls to cover
up stains or holes because they simply can replace the panels.
In a tanning suite, there is nothing more
detrimental to a clean environment than lotion spills and splatters, says Craig
M. Colling, president of Seneca, N.Y.-based Eurowalls LLC.
Lotion sales drive the industry but they have
messy repercussions, he says. An appropriate wall surface is very
important for day-to-day cleaning and maintenance of a salon.
Downtime is a bad word for any business in any
industry. Another benefit to modular walls is that most systems can be built or
repaired in less than a day, says Richard Leff, president of Los Angeles-based
BuiltRite. We have an account owned by two ladies who installed 12 tanning
rooms in two days, he says. Most portable walls are non-progressive, so
any combination of panels can be removed to allow for equipment too wide to fit
through a standard doorway. Many accounts treat them as furniture so they can be
written off faster. The best part is that if you relocate you can take them with
you.
Another benefit is that any standard pre-hung
door easily can be installed, giving the salon owner the freedom to choose the
style hardware and doors he or she wants, DiCristina says.
Financing Options And Building Permits
Since modular walls are considered furniture and
fixtures, they qualify for easier, more available funds through equipment lease
companies. There are also tax benefits. Conventional construction is referred to
as a leasehold improvement that requires the salon owner to depreciate the cost
over a certain number of years. Since lease payments are deductible, they
qualify to be expensed for the term of the lease, which is seldom more than five
years, says Quinn.
It would be misleading to say that modular walls
need no permits. It is, however, safe to say that less permitting and inspecting
is needed than with conventional construction.
Fewer permits and inspections means things
should get done faster and salon operators should be able to open their doors
sooner, Quinn says. We recommend our walls be pre-approved by a salons
local building department prior to installing. We never have been disapproved
for our walls once weve had the opportunity to fully disclose their
composition and attributes. Once the system is approved on paper, the only
inspection needed is the final walk-through just prior to being issued an
occupancy permit.
BuiltRite has yet to experience any problems as
well, Leff says.
Having shipped our walls all over the country,
weve never had any problems, he says. I guess having to meet the
earthquake codes of California gives us added credibility. We can supply the
needed documents that will make attaining permits relatively easy.
Every city is different in terms of building
permits. On the West Coast, anything taller than 5 feet requires a building
permit whether its a wall or a bookcase, Peithman says. Earthquakes are a
big deal on the West Coast so anything taller than 5 feet also has to be
anchored properly, etc. On the East Coast, there are hurricane issues.
Modular walls look great, save money and time,
solve cleaning and equipment-upgrade issues and basically improve the overall
salon buildout process, Leff says. This dynamic industry will continue to
introduce new, innovative products.
In competitive businesses, storeowners are
constantly looking for ways to create visual differences to set their stores
apart from their competitors, Quinn says. Since better than 95 percent of
tanning stores today are built of studs and drywall, the modular look is sassy
and attractive and looks altogether different than drywall.
Its important to remember that all elements
of a buildout have a factor of time, headaches and money, Colling says. The
goal is to constantly strive to lesson these factors. Nothing helps achieve this
goal better than utilizing modular walls.
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