ACPAtlantic Construction Podcast// HOSTED BY DANIEL ARSENAULT
HOME / EPISODES / EP 21
EP 21 · 2022-01-03 · 43:10

How Fabtek Atlantic Built a Glazing Fabrication Shop from Alumacore's Regional Exit | Atlantic Canada Construction

How Fabtek Atlantic was born overnight from Alumacore's regional exit — and what it takes to stand up a glazing fabrication shop in Atlantic Canada.

The story, written up — a sharp read with every fact on the record.
Read the article ▸Read the transcriptOpen on YouTube ↗
// CHAPTERS — TAP TO JUMP THE PLAYER
0:04Cory's background: football, St. FX, and entering the glazing industryCory grew up in Sault Ste. Marie, moved to Nova Scotia in 2008, played quarterback at St. Francis Xavier University, and landed at Alumacore as his first industry role — where mentorship and company-sponsored training set his professional foundation.2:12Professional development in glazing: CSC, CANS blueprint reading, project managementCory outlines the courses he took — construction documentation (SAIT), technical rep (CSC), blueprint reading (CANS), project management — and argues that in a spec-heavy trade like glazing, continuous PD is non-negotiable for staying competitive.5:53The Fabtek origin story: Alumacore exits, opportunity seizedWhen ilumacore decided to discontinue regional fabrication in Dartmouth, the operations manager (Vince Lemieux) and core team recognized an opening. Within months they stood up Fabtek Atlantic at a new Dartmouth address, transitioning nearly all equipment and personnel — effectively a turn-key startup.10:30Market position: who Fabtek serves and who the competitors areCory maps the Atlantic Canada glazing contractor landscape (Flynn, Markland, KP Glass, Halifax Glass, O'Connor Glass PEI, Royal Door NB, Panmar NL, Complete Glazing, Coastal Building Products) and names competitors in fabrication (Anatec, MGM Automated Doors, Social Glass, Silicas PEI). Fabtek's differentiator is multi-supplier agnosticism plus veteran technical depth.16:20Inside the shop: 10,000 sq ft, lean processes, and curtain wall complexityThe facility at 191 Joe Zatsman is just over 10,000 sq ft with all equipment transitioned from Alumacore. Cory explains the curtain wall supply chain: loading calcs, PE-stamped shop drawings, multi-supplier product agnosticism, quality control, and order package accuracy to prevent costly on-site delays.24:25How a job flows: quoting, design assist, fabrication, and the glass handoffCory walks through the fabrication workflow from early quote stage through design assist (especially for private development with no architect), shop drawings, fab, and delivery. He clarifies that Fabtek supplies aluminum frames; glass ordering is the installer's domain. Doors and hardware are a near-term expansion.30:20Supply chain, lead times, and inventory strategy in early 2022With supply chains stressed, Fabtek is working with multiple suppliers and considering stocking inventory to offer reliable lead times. The fast-moving nature of the startup means decisions are still being made in real time.35:30Current projects, regional expansion plans, and closeFabtek is already working on multi-sector jobs across Nova Scotia and has active Newfoundland opportunities. Cory plans to travel Atlantic Canada and eventually reach Montreal. The team is at ~12 people and growing. Closing small talk covers a new baby and a Super Bowl non-answer.
// THE INTRO

In the first episode of Season 2, Daniel Arsenault interviews Cory Wensley, Director of Sales and Marketing at the newly launched Fabtek Atlantic Limited — a Dartmouth-based aluminum and glazing fabrication company that emerged when Alumacore (ilumacore) decided to exit regional fabrication. Cory explains how the former Alumacore operations manager and much of the fabrication team seized the opportunity within months, transitioning equipment and personnel into a new 10,000 sq ft facility at 191 Joe Zatsman Drive. The conversation covers the glazing supply chain (curtain wall, storefront, entrances), the role of a fabricator vs. installer, the technical complexity of large curtain wall projects (loading calcs, shop drawings, PE stamps), supply chain lead times in early 2022, and Fabtek's plan to serve glazing contractors across Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, PEI, Newfoundland, and eventually Quebec. The episode is essentially a soft launch announcement for an Atlantic-Canada-first fabrication supplier filling a genuine regional gap.

// THE LESSONS
See all 10 lessons ▸
When a dominant regional supplier exits a market, the window to capture their client relationships and physical assets is very short — move within weeks, not months.
it was quite fast moving and it still is fast moving like we are
9:56
Transitioning an incumbent's equipment and personnel is the fastest path to standing up a fabrication operation — avoid re-purchasing everything from scratch.
we didn't really have to go out and outsource any equipment anything like that only a few minor things
17:08
In a spec-heavy trade like glazing, continuous professional development (blueprint reading, CSC technical rep, project management) directly translates to estimating speed and accuracy.
you have to know how to sift through those specs and the drawings and find what's relevant
3:55
Being supplier-agnostic as a fabricator — rather than tied to one product line — forces deeper knowledge of competitor equivalents and makes you more valuable to glazing contractors.
we aren't necessarily one supplier driven so we have to understand competition and understand equivalences
26:26
On large curtain wall projects, getting involved at the design/quoting phase (loading calcs, back section sizing) prevents costly spec errors that halt installers on site.
you could be halting somebody on site because you have to order another extrusion or something
25:07
In private development, design-assist by the fabricator is increasingly expected because there is often no architect of record managing glazing specs — the fabricator must fill that gap.
there's not always an architect involved... that's a little bit more of a niche
37:33
Fabrication cost competitiveness lives in the 'fab number' — internal labor time per joint — not just material cost; controlling that ratio allows you to work with clients on pricing even when raw material costs rise.
your internal processes and your fabrication cost is going to allow you to be competitive
32:42
Hiring a team with collective decades of industry-specific experience eliminates the learning curve that kills many fabrication startups — institutional knowledge is the real startup capital.
you have this new company with 10 people with 20 years experience in the same year
24:39
Door hardware is a distinct specialty requiring dedicated internal expertise — compatibility errors between door frame and hardware prep can cascade into expensive field rework.
to know how to prep that and how to cut that right and accurate — it's a Chinese clockmaker
34:29
In a small regional market, treating a departed competitor as a future supplier partner (rather than an adversary) preserves the relationships needed when they hold a product you still need.
we still want to be partners — the industry is small and they have a great product
9:04
All 10 lessons from this episode, on one page.
Sent to your inbox. The receipts included.
// FEATURED BUSINESSES
Fabtek Atlantic Ltd.

Architectural aluminum fabrication shop serving the Atlantic Canadian glazing industry, fabricating bu…

Full dossier ▸
Alumicor Limited

Canadian manufacturer of architectural aluminum building-envelope systems — curtain wall, storefront, …

Full dossier ▸
Hampton Building Systems Inc.

Newfoundland-based supplier and subcontractor of steel buildings, metal cladding, and architectural pa…

Full dossier · 5 projects ▸
// COMPANIES & ORGS ✓ verified
Fabtek Atlantic Ltd.Alumicor LimitedCory WensleyCore Science Facility, Memorial University of NewfoundlandBrenton Place (Halifax)Hampton Building Systems Inc.
// PROJECTS NAMED
Brenton Place (Halifax)Core Science Facility, Memorial University of Newfoundland
SOURCE: podscope · public episode data · a27ZiqgxdEw