Fresh off its acquisition by a French industrial giant, Sage Electrochromics has finished building a $150 million factory in Faribault, Minn., and is poised to ramp up sales of its variable-tint glass. And reap its first profits.
The market for smart glass is expected to grow eightfold to nearly $700 million by 2020, according to recent report by Pike Research. Sage's technology, which alters light transmission with a flip of a switch, offers energy savings on lighting, heating and cooling, especially in large buildings.
Sage, now a subsidiary of Saint-Gobain, a French building products company with $54 billion in annual sales, believes the market could be even bigger. And for now, Sage stands to be the key player.
"They see this as the future of glass," Sage founder and CEO John Van Dine said of the company's new owners.
For Faribault, a city of 23,450 people located 50 miles south of the Twin Cities, the project already is creating well-paying jobs, and promises more.
"This is the largest economic development project that the city has done in recent years, probably ever," said Faribault's community development director, Peter Waldock, who helped assemble $13.6 million in state and local loans and incentives. "This is new technology. ... We hope to see it grow."
Van Dine founded Sage in New York in 1989, and moved it nearly a decade later to Minnesota, which he calls "the Silicon Valley of the window industry" because it's home to windowmakers like Andersen, Marvin and Viracon. Saint-Gobain acquired 100 percent of Sage in May.
SageGlass has been produced at a smaller, adjacent plant in Faribault since 2004, and used widely in skylights. But for commercial building windows, it's remained a niche product, installed in projects ranging from a truck weigh station in Wyoming to a college library in White Bear Lake to a wind turbine factory in Kansas.