Industrial linings and corrosion-protection materials for chemical and power plants
Steuler Linings manufactures specialized coatings, rubber linings, and refractory materials for heavy industrial applications—chemical plants, waste incinerators, ceramics, power generation. The hiring mix is heavily skewed toward manufacturing and engineering roles (29 of 58 open positions), with active projects centered on new coating systems and large-scale capital projects, signaling capacity expansion rather than efficiency optimization. Pain points around forecasting accuracy and profitability assessment on major contracts suggest the company is scaling project delivery and risk management across international subsidiaries.
Notable leadership hires: Chief Financial Officer, Sales Team Lead
Steuler Linings is a publicly traded German manufacturer of industrial protective linings and materials, founded in 1908 and headquartered in Siershahn. The company operates a full-service model: materials development, application engineering, and global installation via a network of over 750 fitters and supervisors across international subsidiaries. Their product portfolio spans acid-resistant linings, rubber coatings, refractory brick, thermoplastic liners, and kiln furniture—engineered for extreme chemical, thermal, and mechanical stresses in process industries. Steuler handles both greenfield plant construction and retrofit/optimization of existing systems, often managing turnkey delivery. The current operating focus includes new coating system development, facility renovation projects, and refinement of project evaluation and cost-control processes.
Steuler supplies industrial linings and corrosion-protection materials (coatings, rubber, acid-resistant, refractory) for chemical plants, power generation, waste incineration, and ceramics. They also provide application engineering, project planning, and installation via 750+ global fitters.
SAP (S/4HANA, MM, Global Trade Services), Microsoft Office suite (PowerPoint, Excel, Project), Adobe InDesign, and CNC systems. No major tech adoptions or replacements currently underway.
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