MAGNETIC SCREEN HOUSE
- Regular price
-
$159.95
+ FREE SHIPPING
- Regular price
-
List: $179.9511.11% off ($20.00) - Sale price
-
$159.95
+ FREE SHIPPING
- Unit price
- per
Make the Wenzel Magnetic Screen House an essential part of your summer picnics and parties! Cool off in the shade and escape pesky bugs at your next outdoor gathering. The color coded and sturdy steel and fiberglass frame makes set-up fast and easy, while also being large enough to fit over a picnic table. With a peak height of 7.5 feet, your whole party will have plenty of head space. Magnetic strips line the large “I” style doors for automatic closure and hands-free entry/exit, making going in and out with kids, pets or food a breeze!
- Weight: 17 lbs 7 oz.
- Size: 11" x 9" x 90", 90 sq ft.
- Poles: Fiberglass
- Doors: 2
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Make the Wenzel Magnetic Screen House an essential part of your summer picnics and parties! Cool off in the shade and escape pesky bugs at your next outdoor gathering. The color coded and sturdy steel and fiberglass frame makes set-up fast and easy, while also being large enough to fit over a picnic table. With a peak height of 7.5 feet, your whole party will have plenty of head space. Magnetic strips line the large “I” style doors for automatic closure and hands-free entry/exit, making going in and out with kids, pets or food a breeze!
- Weight: 17 lbs 7 oz.
- Size: 11" x 9" x 90", 90 sq ft.
- Poles: Fiberglass
- Doors: 2
Need More Help?
Our expert can help guide you through
your purchase.
or send us an email
About the Manufacturer
Manufacturer's Name WENZEL
On an October night in 1866, a sixteen-year-old boy from Germany gathered his belongings, what little money he had, and boarded a Dutch sailing vessel bound for New York. After two long months, the ship was blown off course and arrived in Boston on Christmas Day. With only 50 cents in his pocket, Hermann Wenzel arrived in America.
During his voyage, Wenzel became fascinated with the big canvas sails which powered the boat and was asked by the crew to help repair the sails. Before long, Wenzel landed a job in Springfield, Massachusetts, working with a sailmaker and became interested in canvas awnings. He eventually moved to St. Louis, Missouri and started his awning business in 1887: H. Wenzel Tent & Duck Company.
The company struggled to make a profit in its early years, but with the help of his family, they pivoted from awnings and began manufacturing tents and tarpaulins. The agriculture boom at the beginning of the 20th century sparked large demand for their products as well as wagon covers. A sailmaker by trade, Wenzel knew heavy fabrics and experimented with sewing these fabrics to improve durability and performance without compromising quality for product. Since then, advances in materials and technology have made tents lighter and easier to assemble, but his vision and standard of quality remains to this day.