Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 18, 2013, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE B3
B UHLER Furniture is a dominant
name in the curio cabinet
marketplace in North America.
About 15 years ago, those handsome
glassed- in cabinets your grandmother
kept her Royal Doulton figurines
in represented about 80 per cent of
Buhler Furniture's business.
But who buys curio cabinets anymore?
A large market share in a product
that no longer holds a prominent place
in family sitting rooms is not worth
that much.
That - and the overwhelming flood
of much cheaper offshore residential
furniture - compelled Buhler Furniture
to use its manufacturing infrastructure
to reinvent itself.
Now, curio cabinets represent about
five per cent of the company's sales.
Instead, as much as 50 per cent
comes from casegoods work - beds,
sideboards, tables - for hotels and
other commercial customers. And 100
per cent of it is made in Buhler Furniture's
Winnipeg shop.
" It was not my grand scheme seven
years ago to sell to the hotel business,"
said Doug Buhler, who acquired the
company about 15 years ago from
Buhler Industries, the public company
named after and formerly controlled
by his father Johnny.
" It's just that they are more demanding
about what they buy," he said.
" If they buy 150 rooms of stuff and
it starts to fall apart in the first four
months then they've made a bad deal."
His company is one of a handful of
casegoods suppliers to Delta Hotels in
Canada. It's currently in the process of
making sets for all 393 rooms for the
Delta's Winnipeg hotel, which is in the
process of a top- to- bottom renovation.
Terry Clark, the owner of Acme
Chrome Furniture and a spokesman
for Furniture West, a regional industry
association, said, " It's a real feather in
their cap. Not everyone gets to supply
Delta. You have to achieve compliance
and it's a pretty rigorous test."
Buhler is one of a small number
of North American wood- furniture
manufacturers that does not outsource
offshore. Wood from rubber
trees grown on a plantation in seven
years is no match for the durability of
80- year- old hardwood trees from upstate
New York, according to Buhler.
At some point the much lower price
point is not worth it.
Buhler got into the bedroom furniture
business about seven years ago
and the emphasis on the commercial
rather than retail followed quickly.
" That's because the residential ( retail)
business is going to the Chinese,"
Buhler said, referring to the preponderance
of retail casegoods now made
in low- cost offshore locales.
" We used to sell in Sears, the Brick,
Leon's, the Bay - all the major retailers
in Canada," he said. " But when
people realized, ' Holy smokes, I can
buy three Chinese bedroom sets for
one domestic one,' - and unfortunately
I am not exaggerating - how do
I change that? I can't."
But there are customers out there,
such as Delta Hotels, who want domestic
suppliers providing domestic
product.
Helen Halliday, the general manager
of the Winnipeg Delta, does not make
the call on suppliers, but she said she
was thrilled Buhler got the contract
for her hotel.
" There's a green element to this
( because product does not have to be
shipped from overseas) and it means
keeping Winnipeggers working," she
said. " We're delighted."
Buhler was not planning to get into
the commercial business. In fact, it
took some very persistent badgering
from an oilsands camp near Fort
McMurray, which eventually said it
was willing to pay Buhler a price he
couldn't refuse.
While consumers may not want
to invest for the future, commercial
customers such as large- scale, remote
resource companies, hotels and U. S.
military bases - surprisingly, one of
Buhler Furniture's top 10 customers -
are willing to pay for sturdy product
that can last at least eight years.
Even so, it's a tough market. Hotel
construction has been a booming
business lately in Winnipeg and,
coincidentally, there have been several
developments in close proximity to
Buhler Furniture's plant. Buhler bid
on all those developments, unsuccessfully.
" There is Hampton Hotel that went
up 50 feet from our building," Buhler
said. " We could have literally wheeled
the furniture across the parking lot.
But their furniture came from China."
The reinvention of his company is
taking hold at a cost. The company
has a staff of close to 100 - much less
than it had 10 years ago.
Some say there is the start of a
renaissance in the North American
furniture market for domestic product
and Buhler Furniture is a case in point
there are customers to be had.
But it's still a struggle.
" People also say the record player is
making a comeback as well," Buhler
said. " But is it really? Maybe some
audiophiles will search them out. But
how do you replace a needle? Do you
pay $ 700 for a custommade needle?"
martin. cash@ freepress. mb. ca
BUSINESS EDITOR: SHANE MINKIN 204- 697- 7308 business@ freepress. mb. ca I MARKET DETAILS B4 I winnipegfreepress. com
THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013
B 3
Locally made
to last
The Delta Hotel
contract is ' a real
feather in their cap.
Not everyone gets
to supply Delta.
You have to achieve
compliance and it's a
pretty rigorous test.'
By Martin Cash
Buhler Furniture
transforms itself from
curio cabinet- maker
to commercial
casegoods supplier
PHOTOS BY WAYNE GLOWACKI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
CEO Doug Buhler has watched his business shift away from cabinets and retail to niche clients who are willing to pay for long- enduring bedroom and office furniture.
As glass cabinets fell out of favour, new products became the focus of Buhler Furniture's production.
Flames dance in a Ginza fireplace at
Buhler Furniture's showroom.
A renovated " ModeRoom" in the Delta Winnipeg Hotel.
B_ 03_ Jul- 18- 13_ FP_ 01. indd B3 7/ 17/ 13 6: 31: 20 PM
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