MFMA
MAPLE: TODAY'S PREFERRED SPORTS SURFACE
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Sports flooring
differs immensely from floors designed for any other purpose. Because
the needs of athletes come first, performance, safety and comfort
are inherent characteristics. Floor design can focus on a specific
activity, say aerobics versus basketball, or on multiple purposes
to suit the exact need of a facility or application: gymnasiums;
handball, squash and racquetball courts; basketball courts; health
and fitness clubs; international Olympic facilities; professional
sports arenas; aerobic/dance exercise facilities; dance floors;
auditoriums and convention centers; church and religious facilities;
primary and secondary schools; colleges and universities; corporate
exercise facilities; YWCA/YMCAs; family life centers; roller skating
rinks; theater and performance stages; or commercial, industrial
and residential applications.
 University
of Alabama, Connor Sports Flooring Corporation UniForce |
Time
and time again, athletes, performers, coaches,
trainers, owners and architects who design floors
cite maple as their preferred sports surface.
In fact, maple shows up on 70 percent** of the sports
floors installed in the U.S. And the most preferred
variety, northern hard maple from MFMA manufacturers,
accounts for 58 percent** of all U.S. sports floors--more than
17 million square feet--installed each year. |
| Northern
hard maple has been called nature's perfect flooring
surface. MFMA maple is produced from trees grown
north of the 38th parallel where shorter growing
seasons produce maple with closer, more uniform
grain. In a floor, northern hard maple exhibits
flexibility, resilience, durability, finishability
and low-demand maintenance. |
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"We
are very pleased with the athletic
performance on our MFMA floors in our
varsity basketball arena, intramural
gym and dance studio...we have found
MFMA maple to be very aesthetically
pleasing."
Barbara
Bickford, Associate Director of Athletics
Brandeis University
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Athletic performance
is enhanced by its hard-but-resilient character. Subfloor systems
enhance maple's natural shock absorption and area elasticity. And
the surface provides dependably uniform grip and traction to athletic
footwear. Safety is vastly enhanced by these same characteristics
as documented in a study*** that showed that athletes were 70 percent more likely to sustain a floor-related injury on a synthetic floor
than on a maple floor.
MFMA maple's life
cycle cost is significantly less than that of synthetics. Life cycle
cost comparisons reflect original installed price plus manufacturer-recommended
maintenance over a 30 year floor life:
| Northern
hard maple ............. |
79c
/ sq. ft. / year |
| Poured
urethane .................. |
$1.10
/ sq. ft. / year |
| PVC
................................... |
$1.15
/ sq. ft. / year |
A maple surface
requires considerably less maintenance and most of it can be done "in-house" without
special equipment.
Northern hard
maple was first used in sports flooring nearly 150 years ago. From
the beginning, it was evident, however, that even "nature's perfect
flooring" needed a little help if consistently outstanding floors
were to be built.
Consistent quality became the mission of a handful
of producers who, in 1897, formed the Maple Flooring Manufacturers
Association -- the MFMA. Their purpose was to research and develop
the best procedures for the selection and grading of the wood. Over
time, a set of strict, self-imposed manufacturing standards evolved
for members which they adopted in pursuit of consistent quality.
The association established itself as the authoritative source of
technical and general information on sports flooring. Equally important,
the MFMA established installation and maintenance standards to help
its contractor members deliver and assure a product that lives up
to its promises.
More than 150
MFMA associate member contractors and distributors worldwide follow
procedures affecting the handling, storing and installation of MFMA
maple. MFMA manufacturers continuously test and develop various
subflooring systems in order to maximize athletic performance on
maple sports surfaces. To top it all off, the MFMA publishes a list
of tested, recommended floor finishes that are designed to optimize
athletic performance while enhancing the legendary durability of
the maple playing surface.
| MFMA
associate member contractors are uniquely equipped
to assist architects and facility owners with
the design and construction of new athletic facilities,
renovations and sports floor replacements. |
 Duke
University, Robbins Sports Surfaces Bio
Channel |
An MFMA mill number
is embossed into the back of every strip of MFMA maple. It is your
guarantee that strictly enforced MFMA grading rules and quality
standards have been painstakingly followed in the production of
each strip of flooring. It assures the wood has been kiln dried
to 6 percent to 9 percent moisture content which makes it dimensionally stable
before manufacturing begins. It assures that the finished maple
strip has been milled to consistently exact tolerances as mandated
by the MFMA.
* 1994, Ducker
Research Company, Inc.
** 1991, Ducker Research Company, Inc.
*** 1988, Ducker Research Company, Inc.
FREE
TECHNICAL DATA
Complete Grading
Rules for Random Strip, Finger Jointed and Parquet flooring are
published by MFMA for reference by architects and specifiers. Grading
permits selection of MFMA maple flooring according to use and budget.
| MFMA
offers a library of information on the manufacture,
installation and maintenance of MFMA maple flooring.
Literature is available at no charge to architects
and specifiers. Videos are available for a nominal
fee. |
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"I
found the assistance and the technical
data from MFMA to be valuable... and
I was grateful to the contractor for
working closely with us from the very
outset."
Frank
Fernandez, AIA Architect for the Recreation
Center of West New York, New Jersey
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Literature:
Caring for your MFMA Maple
Floor (Wall Chart)
Floor Finish List & Specifications
Grading Rules for MFMA
Northern Hard Maple Finger Jointed Strip Flooring
Grading Rules for MFMA Northern Hard
Maple Strip Flooring
Grading Rules for MFMA Northern Hard
Maple Parquet Flooring
Incidence of Injury Study: Maple Flooring
vs. Synthetic
Life Cycle Cost Study Summary and
Cost Comparison Worksheet
MFMA Maple Flooring: Today's Preferred
Sports Surface
MFMA Sweet's(c) Catalog -
09642/MAP - Buyline 3238
MFMA Game Markings Manual
MFMA Guide Specifications (for "generic" subfloor
systems)
MFMA Maple Flooring: The Logical Choice
for Your Home
Performance Characteristics Guide
Sanding, Sealing, Court Lining,
Finishing and Resurfacing of Maple Gym Floors
Spec-Data (in CSI Format)
Videos:
"Your Next Sports Floor: Things You Should Know" (12:00 VHS)
"Playing For Keeps" (9:50, VHS, English and Spanish versions included). Proper
care and maintenance of your MFMA sports floor
MFMA
MANUFACTURERS
MFMA maple flooring
is manufactured to the highest standards in the flooring industry,
by these manufacturers only:
Aacer
Flooring, LLC
P.O. Box 151
Peshtigo, WI 54157
Phone: 877-582-1181
Fax: 715-582-1182
E-mail: sandral@aacerflooring.com
www.aacerflooring.com |
Horner Flooring Company
P.O. Box 380
Dollar Bay, MI 49922
Phone: 800-380-0119
Fax: 906-482-6115
E-mail: info@hornerflooring.com
www.hornerflooring.com |
Action
Floor Systems, LLC
4781 S. Highway 51 North
Mercer, WI 54547-9708
Phone: 800-746-3512
Fax: 715-476-3585
E-mail: info@actionfloors.com
www.actionfloors.com |
Robbins
Sport Surfaces, Inc.
4777 Eastern Avenue
Cincinnati, OH 45226
Phone: 800-543-1913
Fax: 513-871-7998
E-mail: info@robbinsfloor.com
www.robbinsfloor.com |
Connor
Sports Flooring Corporation
545 E. Algonquin Road, Suite L
Arlington Heights, IL 60005
Phone: 800-283-9522
Fax: 847-290-9034
E-mail: sportflr@connorfloor.com
www.connorfloor.com |
W · D Flooring, LLC
P.O. Box 368
Laona, WI 54541
715-674-2210
Fax: 715-674-4411
info@wdflooring.com
www.wdflooring.com |
MFMA Showcase Installations
| 1984
Summer Olympic Games, Los Angeles, California |
Hofstra
University, Hempstead, New York |
| 1988
Summer Olympic Games, Seoul, Korea |
Indiana
Basketball Academy, Indianapolis, Indiana Indiana
University, Bloomington, Indiana |
| 1990
Goodwill Games, Seattle, Washington |
Lincoln
High School, Sioux Falls, South Dakota |
| 1992
Summer Olympic Games, Barcelona, Spain |
Miami
Heat Training/Practice Center, Miami, Florida |
| 1992
McDonald's Open, Paris, France |
Middle
Tennessee State University, Murfreesboro, Tennessee |
| 1996
Summer Olympic Games, Atlanta, Georgia |
Montana
State University, Bozeman, Montana |
| 2000
Summer Olympic Games, Sydney, Australia |
Mullen
High School, Mullen, Nebraska |
| Amherst
College, Amherst, Massachusetts |
Nebraska
Wesleyan University, Lincoln, Nebraska |
| Arizona
State University, Tempe, Arizona |
Northwestern
University, Evanston, Illinois |
| Atlanta
Hawks Training/Practice Center, Atlanta, Georgia |
OAKA
Olympic Stadium, Greece |
| Bolingbrook
Recreation Center, Bolingbrook, Illinois |
Ping
Dong University, Taiwan |
| Brandeis
University, Waltham, Massachusetts |
Rice
University, Houston, Texas |
| Bryant
College, Smithfield, Rhode Island |
Salvation
Army Community Center, Sacramento, California |
| California
State University-Northridge, Northridge, California |
Seton
Hall University, South Orange, New Jersey |
| Charlotte
Hornets Training/Practice Center, Charlotte,
North Carolina |
Stonehill
College, North Easton, Massachusetts |
| Chicago
Bulls Training/Practice Center, Chicago, Illinois |
Texas
A&M University, College Station, Texas |
| Cooper
Institute for Aerobics Research, Dallas, Texas |
United
States Military Academy at West Point |
| Coral
Gables Community Center, Coral Gables, Florida |
University
of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas |
| Cornell
University, Ithaca, New York |
University
of South Queensland, Australia |
| Davenport
Athletic Club, Davenport, Iowa |
University
of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin |
| Davidson
College, Davidson, North Carolina |
University
of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin |
| Disney
Institute, Orlando, Florida |
West
New York Recreation Center, West New York, New
Jersey |
| Duke
University, Durham, North Carolina |
Yale
University, New Haven, Connecticut |
| Fullerton
High School, Fullerton, Nebraska |
YMCA
of Greater Des Moines, Des Moines, Iowa |
| Georgia
Tech University, Atlanta, Georgia |
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"In
over twenty years of specifying hardwood
gym floors in schools, I have never
had to reject a single piece of MFMA
flooring for any reason."
Joe
Elliott, Little & Associates Architects,
Charlotte, North Carolina
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Maple
Flooring Manufacturers Association
111 Deer Lake Road, Suite 100
Deerfield, IL 60015 U.S.A.
Phone: 847/480-9138,
Fax: 847/480-9282
E-mail: mfma@maplefloor.org www.maplefloor.org |

Virginia
Commonwealth University, Horner Flooring Company Horner
SAFE System
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