|
1930 | Bally Novelty Works began building cedar chests & refrigerated grocery display cases in a small rented building in Bally, PA. |
1935 | Bally Case & Cooler moved to a larger manufacturing facility, and expanded its product lines to include refrigerated display cases, grocery shelving, and wood-clad, cork-insulated Walk-Ins. |
1939 | Created the fiberglass-insulated Walk-In. |
1940s | All display case manufacturing ceased during World War II, but Bally continued to make Walk-In coolers, and munitions for the armed forces. |
1950s | Returned to normal business of production of Walk-Ins |
1962 | Produced the first urethane-insulated modular building panel; revolutionizing the Walk-In industry. |
1968 | The Speed-Lok diaphragmatic joining system was introduced. |
1969 | Bally was the first company that received FM, Class I, and UL listings on panels. |
1972 | Bally built its first modular structure; satisfying demands for energy conservation. |
1988 | Developed the Northwind Blast Chiller. |
1991 | Patented Welded Seam Panel technology for food processing installations. |
1992 | First company that fabricated panels with CFC-free foam insulation. |
1995 | Bally is bought by John Reilly, Jr., and becomes Bally Refrigerated Boxes, Inc. Headquarters moves to a state-of-the-art manufacturing plant in Morehead City, North Carolina. |
2003 | Awarded the 2003 Stratospheric Ozone Protection Award by the US Environmental Protection Agency for being the first company in the industry to switch to a non ozone-depleting urethane foam system. |
2010 | The SmartSpeed® Evaporator was created, boasting energy saving of around 45% over standard evaporators. |