Industrial and Commercial

TechFiberglass, Inc. has an extensive and impressive resume in the commercial and industrial fields. We have worked for the federal goverment, Hughes Aerospace, Moog, The City of Tucson, The City of Scottsdale, The City of Tolleson, The City of El Paso, Phelps Dodge, CalEnergy and Baca Float to name a handful. We are capable of helping solve large-scale problems with products including:

  • Fumes Scrubbers
  • Chemical Coatings
  • Emergency and On-site FRP installation & repair
  • FRP Ducting
  • FRP Pipe
  • Media Filtration
  • Municipal Water Enclosures (Sodium Hypochlorite Chambers)
  • Municipal Waste Water Solutions
  • Aerospace Composites
  • Large-scale Storage Tanks
  • and more

Materials

We use only the highest quality resins from:

Rainwater Harvest

For every square foot of surface you are collecting, for each inch of rainfall, you can collect .61 gallons of water. If you are collecting a meager 1000 square feet, you will collect over 600 gallons for each inch of rain! Tucson averages 12 inches of rain during the summer monsoons, so this will amount to almost 7400 gallons of rainwater in one season.


Storm water runoff can prove potentially harmful. The EPA has some facts and tips about storm water runoff: http://www.epa.gov/weatherchannel/stormwater.html


As Arizona grows, the need for creative solutions to support our growing water needs increases as well. When you collect and store rainwater, you can use that water during the dry season to supplement your municipal or well water service.


You can drink it too! We offer a full line of sediment and UV filtration options that pair up with our tanks so that you can filter that rainwater and actually supplement your entire home with collected rain.


It might soon be mandatory. More and more municipalities are considering making rainwater harvesting mandatory for new developments including new residential housing.


Rainwater Harvest & Tank Size Calculator

FORMULA is Input A "Square Feet Collected" x .61 = Result B. Result B x Input C "Average Rainfall per Year" = Water Collected Per Year Result D