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Sunday, December 6 - 2009

ABTAL ALJAZIRA CENTRAL BOOK STORE

Po Box 54481
Riyadh
Saudi Arabia

Phone: +966(1)2316093

ABTAL EL OBOUR

9, 26th July St
Cairo
Egypt

Phone: +20 5772486

ABU ABDULLAH TAILOR

Po Box 60941
Riyadh
Saudi Arabia

Phone: +966(1)4300418

ABU AL A'RAYES CARPENTRY & TRADE COMPANY

Po Box 38431
Amman
Jordan

Phone: +962(6)4750964

ABU ALSAUD TRANSLATION OFFICE

Po Box 3526
Riyadh
Saudi Arabia

Phone: +966(1)4730889

ABU BADR COMMERCIAL EXHIBITION

Po Box 10595
Riyadh
Saudi Arabia

Phone: +966(1)4777939

ABU BASMA GROCERIES

Po Box 5009
Riyadh
Saudi Arabia

Phone: +966(1)4255506

ABU DHABI MOTOR TRAINING SCHOOL

Po Box 45906
Abu Dhabi
United Arab Emirates

Phone: +971(2)484878

Description of Classification

Furniture and Related Product Manufacturing (NAICS #337)

Industries in the Furniture and Related Product Manufacturing subsector make furniture and related articles, such as mattresses, window blinds, cabinets, and fixtures. The processes used in the manufacture of furniture include the cutting, bending, molding, laminating, and assembly of such materials as wood, metal, glass, plastics, and rattan. However, the production process for furniture is not solely bending metal, cutting and shaping wood, or extruding and molding plastics. Design and fashion trends play an important part in the production of furniture. The integrated design of the article for both esthetic and functional qualities is also a major part of the process of manufacturing furniture. Design services may be performed by the furniture establishment's work force or may be purchased from industrial designers.

Furniture may be made of any material, but the most common ones used in North America are metal and wood. Furniture manufacturing establishments may specialize in making articles primarily from one material. Some of the equipment required to make a wooden table, for example, is different from that used to make a metal one. However, furniture is usually made from several materials. A wooden table might have metal brackets, and a wooden chair a fabric or plastics seat. Therefore, in NAICS, furniture initially is classified based on the type of furniture (application for which it is designed) rather than the material used. For example, an upholstered sofa is treated as household furniture, although it may also be used in hotels or offices.

When classifying furniture according to the component material from which it is made, furniture made from more than one material is classified based on the material used in the frame, or if there is no frame, the predominant component material. Upholstered household furniture (excluding kitchen and dining room chairs with upholstered seats) is classified without regard to the frame material. Kitchen or dining room chairs with upholstered seats are classified according to the frame material.

Furniture may be made on a stock or custom basis and may be shipped assembled or unassembled (i.e., knockdown). The manufacture of furniture parts and frames is included in this subsector.

Some of the processes used in furniture manufacturing are similar to processes that are used in other segments of manufacturing. For example, cutting and assembly occurs in the production of wood trusses that are classified in Subsector 321, Wood Product Manufacturing. However, the multiple processes that distinguish wood furniture manufacturing from wood product manufacturing warrant inclusion of wooden furniture manufacturing in the Furniture and Related Product Manufacturing subsector. Metal furniture manufacturing uses techniques that are also employed in the manufacturing of roll-formed products classified in Subsector 332, Fabricated Metal Product Manufacturing. The molding process for plastics furniture is similar to the molding of other plastics products. However, plastics furniture producing establishments tend to specialize in furniture.

NAICS attempts to keep furniture manufacturing together, but there are two notable exceptions: seating for transportation equipment and laboratory and hospital furniture. These exceptions are related to that fact that some of the aspects of the production process for these products, primarily the design, are highly integrated with that of other manufactured goods, namely motor vehicles and health equipment.