Dallas-based private equity firm Highlander Partners has acquired Custom Window Systems (CWS), a designer, manufacturer and marketer of impact-resistant and non-impact windows and doors, primarily serving Florida and other coastal markets in the Southeastern US.
CWS will continue to operate under its existing name and operating structure.
Greg Schorr, a senior adviser for Highlander, will join CWS as the president and chief executive officer. Schorr was formerly the president and chief operating officer of the parent company of Simonton Windows.
John Cwik, the company’s founder, president and chief executive, will continue to work with CWS in a consulting and advisory role. In 2006, Cwik successfully refocused the business on impact-resistant vinyl windows and doors and relocated to a new 250,000 square foot facility in Ocala, where it currently employs approximately 290 people.
Schorr says: "I think this is the perfect time to re-enter the window and door industry and I am glad to do it in partnership with Highlander. We see a huge opportunity to capitalise on a rebounding housing market with one of the nation’s leading independent designers and manufacturers of windows and doors."
Jeff L Hull, Highlander’s managing partner and the new chairman of CWS, says: "We are very excited about the opportunity to draw on our collective backgrounds in the window and door industry and leverage our expertise in working with CWS. John and his team did a great job of managing the business through the downturn, and John’s forward-looking decision to refocus his operations from aluminium to vinyl windows and doors in 2006 positions the company to capitalise on a long-term market transition to vinyl, which has been driven by energy code changes."
Hull is the former chairman, president, and chief executive officer of Atrium Companies, one of the largest window and door manufacturers in the US.
Raymond James served as the exclusive financial adviser to CWS in connection with this transaction. Regions Bank provided senior financing facilities in the transaction.