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Clean Show Returns to Atlanta After 28 Years (Part 1)

ATLANTA — Professionals from all facets of the laundering, textile care and drycleaning industries will convene once again April 16-19 for the biennial World Educational Congress for Laundering and Drycleaning—better known by most in the industry as the Clean Show.

“I’m anxious to see what this time slot in April will do,” says John Riddle, president of Riddle & Associates, the Clean Show’s management company.

“Atlanta is a good city [and] I think people are going to find out a lot of positive things are going on around here.”

RETURN TO ATLANTA

In its 38th year, the exhibition makes a return trip to Atlanta, some 28 years since the city last hosted the show in 1987.

The Clean Show’s theme this year is “One Industry. One Stage.” The Georgia World Congress Center provides the platform for the exhibition.

This will be the third time that the Georgia World Congress Center plays host to the show (it also hosted in 1981), particularly as recent renovations to the center allow it to accommodate the show’s size and unique utility demands.

As previously reported in American Laundry News, a new steam system has been installed at the center, covering approximately 125,000 square feet of exhibit space, according to Riddle & Associates.

“The Clean Show features working equipment and uses more steam than any other trade show in the world,” the company explains.

“[The show takes] the entire textile care industry, from the coin-operated stores to your huge commercial laundries, and everything in between in textile care, [and] we put them all together all on one stage. We’re all here,” says Riddle of the show’s theme.

“I can’t tell you that I see any trends different than what we’ve seen in the past, [but] we’ve got some new companies coming and I think we’re going to have a great show,” Riddle adds.

“If anybody is in the textile care industry ... you’ve got to be here in the show, because, this is going to sound cliché, but this is the Super Bowl of the textile care industry.”

Clean 2015 is set to take place in Building B of the convention center, in halls B2 to B5, with an anticipated total exhibit space encompassing approximately 195,000 net square feet, according to Riddle & Associates.

This year’s show sees another return, as the exhibition reverts to its traditional four-day format, after Clean 2013’s shortened three-day schedule.

Distributors will have exclusive early access to the show floor beginning 8 a.m. on Thursday, April 16, with the show open to all attendees from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m.

Show hours for Friday and Saturday are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., while Sunday has a shorter schedule: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

The 2013 show, hosted by the Morial Convention Center in New Orleans, attracted 10,300 industry professionals, including 1,663 people from 83 countries outside of the United States, according to Riddle & Associates.

A CLEAN HISTORY

Named 112th among 2013 Trade Show News Network’s Top 250 Trade Shows, the Clean Show is the largest textile care exposition in the world that features working equipment, says Riddle & Associates.

The show traces its roots back to the mid-1970s, when industry manufacturers and suppliers found exhibiting shows annually was costly. Interest in consolidating into one biennial industry-wide show was expressed, and as a result, three associations collaborated for a 1975 show they called the Clean Show.

Three additional sponsors joined, eventually forming the World Educational Congress for Laundering and Drycleaning in 1977, giving birth to the Clean Show with which the industry is familiar today.

Current show sponsors are the Association for Linen Management (ALM), Coin Laundry Association (CLA), Drycleaning & Laundry Institute (DLI), Textile Care Allied Trades Association (TCATA), and the Textile Rental Services Association of America (TRSA).

Initially, the show was hosted in Chicago, where it has been presented four times. In addition to Atlanta, the Clean Show has also been presented in Las Vegas (five times), New Orleans (five times) and Orlando (twice), as those cities became the only venues that could accommodate the show’s size and utility requirements.

In 1992, the show (which was being managed by the CLA) had grown in size and stature, leading sponsors to seek counsel with professional show management, according to Riddle & Associates, which was then hired to produce Clean ’93.

The move was a “natural fit,” the company says, as John Riddle had worked with the Clean Show’s operations since 1981.

Check back Wednesday for the conclusion!

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(Photo: © James Duckworth/Atlanta Convention and Visitors Bureau)

Have a question or comment? E-mail our editor Matt Poe at [email protected].