Company Overview
Chicago Faucets has been America's leading manufacturer of commercial faucets for over 100 years. With manufacturing, research and development facilities located solely in the United States, you can count on products that are made with an unwavering commitment to quality backed by know-how and determination that is uniquely American.

Our foundry, manufacturing, assembly and distribution facilities are located within a 350 mile radius of our corporate office in Chicago, IL. This provides unparalleled control of product quality and an ability to effectively deliver products to any point in the United States.


On July 12, 1901 Chicago Faucets founder, Albert C. Brown, took his savings and opened a small shop in the near West Side of Chicago. There he produced a variety of plumbing fixtures as an OEM supplier, as well as lamp shade frames, gas regulator valves, and oil burner tips and nozzles. By 1911, demand for the company's plumbing products had grown to the point where it began marketing them under its own name and distributing its expanding line through wholesale plumbing supply houses.

In 1913, A.C. Brown invented a cartridge that laid the cornerstone of The Chicago Faucet Company. This major breakthrough in faucet design was the patented Quaturn™ cartridge. The replaceable, completely self-contained cartridge was revolutionary in its ability to turn water flow off from full flow with one-quarter turn of the handle. Also unique was the way the cartridge closed with the flow of the water rather than against it, reducing washer wear and virtually eliminating drips. It was noteworthy that the cartridge was replaceable and interchangeable with other Chicago Faucets products. The Quaturn cartridge became the standard of reliability, durability, and value as a result of the Chicago Faucets commitment to standardization and renewability of parts. The Quaturn cartridge has been updated over the years to incorporate new technology and materials, but it is still interchangeable with any Quaturn manufactured since 1913.

As the country and the city of Chicago grew, so too did Chicago Faucets, moving to a larger facility in 1915. In addition to manufacturing and selling faucets, the company created a dominant niche as a supplier of faucets and valves to plumbing specifiers and commercial maintenance engineers in the Midwest. Even in those days, Chicago Faucets cultivated its reputation for customer service, often delivering products to customers by horse and wagon.

Reacting to the needs of the market in the early 1920's, Chicago Faucets chrome plated fixtures gradually replaced the more traditional porcelain handled fixtures. Concurrently, the city of Chicago was undergoing an unprecedented building boom. New factories, office buildings, theatres, hotels, and homes were being constructed at record rates. Chicago Faucets expanded manufacturing capacity in the late 1920's to keep up with the explosive demand for its products.

New construction stopped abruptly with the onset of the Great Depression. Chicago Faucets, like most other firms, was hit hard during this time; however, the company reacted not by closing its doors, but by significantly reducing its work week to as few as two days per week. The company struggled to find bits and pieces of replacement business wherever possible. The tide began to turn in 1933 when Chicago staged the Century of Progress World's Fair. Chicago Faucets was an exhibitor and received national recognition for its quality. Orders picked up as a result, and the company grew along with the rest of the nation as the economy gradually strengthened through the late 1930s and into the early 1940s.

During World War II and the Korean conflict, Chicago Faucets converted to the production of war related products, such as, nuts, bolts, screws, and parachute hooks. Many of the company's employees either enlisted or were drafted into the Armed Forces. It was 1953 before operations returned to normal. The postwar building boom led to prosperity, and in 1961, a new, much larger facility was built in suburban Des Plaines - within minutes of O'Hare International Airport. Significant expansions have taken place in every decade since.

In July 2002, the Geberit Group acquired Chicago Faucets. The Geberit Group, a 125 year-old company headquartered in Jona, Switzerland, is a European market leader and global provider in the area of plumbing technology. The company employs a staff of over 6,000 people worldwide. The Chicago Faucets company employs over 250 people in operations located in Des Plaines; Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Michigan City, Indiana; and Elyria, Ohio. Chicago Faucets is one of only a few companies that still produce permanent mold, yellow brass castings right here in the US. In addition to standard castings, Chicago Faucets produces ECAST faucets, our line of durable, high-quality faucets and fittings that are designed and manufactured with 0.25% or less total lead content by weighted average.

Over the years, new products and new markets have kept Chicago Faucets growing. Today, more than 110 years after A.C. Brown opened his shop on Chicago's West Side, his spirit lives on in the hundreds of Chicago Faucets employees who every day seek to meet customer needs with innovative, high quality products. The company remains a leader in supplying fittings for the hospitals, schools, restaurants, office buildings, airports, conference centers, stadiums, and many other commercial installations. Whatever your requirements may be, Chicago Faucets offers standard and made-to-order products that are designed to meet any commercial application.
 
 
 
Company Summary
Name
Chicago Faucets
Number of Employees
51-200
Phone
(224) 220-2933
Location
6060 W Douglas Ave
Milwaukee, WI
53218-1546