Johns Manville Engineered Products spotlights fiberglass, nonwoven solutions
JEC World 2026: Visitors are invited to stop by the booth, connect with the JM team and participate in technical discussions in the familiar setting of the JM Sports Bar in Paris.
Johns Manville Engineered Products (JM, Trnava, Slovakia and Denver, Colo., U.S.) welcomes customers and partners for discussions focused on material performance, processing behavior and future-focused composite applications.
This year, JM highlights key innovations and technical advancements across its fiberglass and nonwoven portfolios. The company presents the latest developments within its established product families, including StarRov single-end rovings, MultiStar multi-end rovings, StarStran and ThermoFlow chopped strands, and Evalith fiberglass mat.
Visitors also have the opportunity to learn about JM’s ongoing progress in BPA‑free development pathways, and reinforcement options designed for HDPE systems, two areas gaining relevance due to evolving regulatory requirements and the growing integration of circular design principles in composite structures.
A central focus for JM remains the technical exchange between experts and visitors. Representatives from JM’s European and North American teams are available to discuss application‑specific challenges, processing conditions and material interactions that influence composite performance. Their daily collaboration with manufacturers provides practical insights into dependable performance, technical guidance and solutions tailored to long-term program requirements.
JM’s John Vasuta, president of its Engineered Products business, is also in attendance, available for direct discussions with customers and industry partners.
With manufacturing sites in Europe and the U.S., JM provides reliable supply, consistent quality and responsive technical support. The company’s long-standing customer relationships, service mindset and transparent communication remain central to how JM supports its partners worldwide.
Visit Johns Manville at Booth N80 in Hall 5.
Related Content
-
Thermoplastic composite pipes provide 59% reduction in H2 distribution CO2 emissions
Hive Composites’ multilayer thermoplastic composite pipe (TPC) design meets hydrogen permeation requirements while ensuring substantial CO2 reductions compared to conventional steel pipe systems.
-
High-tension, vertical filament winding enables affordable flywheel energy storage system
French startup Energiestro’s prototype solar energy flywheel-based storage system aims to reduce costs with glass fiber composites and prestressed concrete.
-
Hybrid composite architecture enables rigid wind propulsion solution for maritime decarbonization
GT Wings’ AirWing leverages aerospace engineering principles combined with hybrid glass and carbon fiber composite construction to deliver up to 30% fuel savings through compact, deck-compatible wind propulsion.