Masonry Magazine July 1970 Page. 27

Masonry Magazine July 1970 Page. 27

Masonry Magazine July 1970 Page. 27
NADD Report
By: Patrick D. Whitehurst

Mr. Whitehurst is Executive Secretary of the National Association of Distributors and Dealers headquartered in McLean, Virginia. His column will be a regular monthly feature.

Washington, D. C.-The Masonry & Clay Products Industry today is confronted with a challenge that we all must face, and face together each of us accepting our individual responsibility as "industry citizens." The challenge, of course, is industrialized building, and more particularly-brick panelization.

Recently at the University of Texas in Austin a seminar dissected the economics and techniques of using brick panels in the construction of a twenty-nine story building. The technique involved in the construction offered one solution to a problem that has confronted our industry and has made us take another look into the area of responsibility for development of brick panel systems.

It seems most of our industry has arbitrarily though perhaps unknowingly-placed the entire burden of panel development squarely in the laps of the brick manufacturers. The manufacturers, their operations naturally oriented toward production, have been reluctant to undertake the tremendous financial investments necessary to pioneer, develop, and promote a profitable factory-produced panel. And for these very reasons development has lagged.

The Austin job has exposed members of the Clay Products Industry to a simple, straightforward technique that seems to make everybody a winner. Panels were constructed by union masons on the jobsite using the lower floor of the building as the fabricating site. As the panels were completed, they were moved out and lifted by crane into place on the concrete frame.

Simple straightforward... and at a cost of $2.64 per sq. ft. per panel -a price competitive with any other panel system on the market today.

No expensive factories had to be built; there was not the expense or worry of transporting panels from a plant, and perhaps one of the greatest advantages was the efficient utilization masonry


new name:
AVCO
same
FELKER CORPORATION
highest quality
products.

DIAMOND BLADES
ABRASIVE BLADES
MASONRY, TILE, CONCRETE SAWING
DIAMOND CORE DRILLS
MASONRY-TILE-CONCRETE SAWS
CORE DRILLING MACHINES
ABRASIVE HUB, HAT, CUP WHEELS
RUBS & DISCS
AVCO
FELKER CORPORATION
1900 0 S. CRENSHAW BLVD., TORRANCE, CALIFORNIA 90509
TELEPHONE: (213) 328-4704


Masonry Magazine December 2012 Page. 45
December 2012

WORLD OF CONCRETE

REGISTER NOW; RECEIVE A FREE HAT!
The first 25 people to register this month using source code MCAA will receive a free MCAA Max Hat (valued at $15.00)! The MCAA Max Hat features a 3D MCAA logo embroidered on front with a

Masonry Magazine December 2012 Page. 46
December 2012

Index to Advertisers

AIRPLACO EQUIPMENT
888.349.2950
www.airplace.com
RS #296

KRANDO METAL PRODUCTS, INC.
610.543.4311
www.krando.com
RS #191

REECHCRAFT
888.600.6060
www.reechcraft.com
RS #3

Masonry Magazine December 2012 Page. 47
December 2012

AMERIMIX
MORTARS GROUTS STUCCOS

Why Amerimix Preblended Products?

576

The choice is CLEAR:

Consistency

Labor reduction

Enhanced productivity

ASTM - pretested to ASTM specifications

Masonry Magazine December 2012 Page. 48
December 2012

MASON MIX
Type S Mortar
QUIKRETE
www.quikrete.com
800-282-5828

MASON MIX
Type 5 Mortar
COMMERCIAL GRADE
QUIKRETE

Our mortar mix on Vail's Solaris was so consistent, every bag was like the next. And the next