Konamanje Engineering & Shower Projects

14th February 2014

Konamanje Engineering & Shower Projects

Photo by: Duane Daws

Established in 2008, Gauteng-based Konamanje Engineering & Shower Projects (KESP) provides a variety of emergency showers and eyewash stations that are manufactured, supplied and repaired in accordance with international standards to meet the requirements of the safety industry.

The company’s emergency showers carry a one-year warranty and can be bought with or without eyewash units.

Based on KESP’s quality policy, the company has established a set of quality standards, which it implements throughout the organisation to ensure that each product leaving the production line is safe and reliable.

KESP’s emergency showers, subject to its Quality Assurance Programme, are manufactured according to the company’s Project Quality Plan and in accordance with the standards of the American National Standards Institute. All emergency showers undergo standard operating test procedures. Maintenance instructions and installation drawings are supplied to ensure correct installation and maintenance.

KESP supplies not only safety showers to clients, including mines and entities across Africa, but also firefighting equipment and cost-effective spill kits, with a range of absorbents for oil, chemical spills and general-purpose applications.

The ten-man-strong company uses milling and turning technology to fabricate small steel structures.

KESP self-designs and manufactures all its own products to ensure reliability, practicality and, most importantly, protection for its customers.

The company’s 1" stainless steel valve, designed and manufactured in-house using modern manufacturing and treatment techniques and the best-quality materials, is a testament to KESP’s superior product quality, which remains unsurpassed when it comes to durability.

KESP’s 450 m2 premises are based at 388 Harvest street, Bredell, in Kempton Park. The company’s fixed asset value is pegged at R1.1-million and KESP currently turns over just less than R5-million a year.