General Plumbing Supply recently announced it has signed an agreement with Johnson Controls Inc. (NYSE:JCI) to become a distributor of its Luxaire® and Guardian® brands of products and Source 1™ parts throughout the mid-Atlantic region, effective February 2018.
Johnson Controls and AtmosAir Solutions have partnered to deliver measurably cleaner indoor air quality. This collaboration will help JCI provide outstanding air purification performance in their YORK Air Handling Systems.
GLAS—a simple-to-use, yet powerful smart thermostat. GLAS leverages more than 135 years of insights in building control systems to create a thermostat with an efficient and modern perspective. GLAS utilizes a translucent OLED touchscreen display to control its functions. Users simply touch the screen to change the temperature, monitor indoor and outdoor air quality, track energy savings, or perform other functions
On December 16, Barnes Heating and Air joined local contractors and Building Homes for Heroes at a Welcome Home ceremony in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida for Air Force Captain Nathan Nelson. Johnson Controls donated a YORK ® heating and cooling system and Barnes Heating and Air provided installation services for the veteran’s new home.
Johnson Controls has acquired M&A Supply Co. Inc.’s five successful York® branches in the southeast markets of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. The branches will become part of the Source 1™ HVAC Supply network.
Source 1 is the exclusive supplier of factory authorized service parts and residential accessories for all Johnson Controls unitary products residential and light commercial HVAC equipment. The company also offers a broad variety of universal HVAC parts, supplies, and accessories from many manufacturers.
Among the system’s key enhancements from previous versions are graphics available across multiple mobile devices, alarm management that enables alarm prioritization for improved productivity, and improved scheduling and custom trending that save time and ease troubleshooting.
The installation included a 227-kW solar photovoltaic array on the school’s roof, a wood pellet boiler to supply most of the school’s heating needs, and replacement of 42 classroom ventilators and all the windows that are original to the 1961 portion of the building