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Decorative Concrete company history timeline

1824

3 The process for making portland cement is patented in 1824 by an Englishman named Joseph Aspdin.

1836

In 1836, the first test of tensile and compressive strength took place in Germany.

1886

In 1886, the first rotary kiln was introduced in England that made constant production of cement.

1904

In the years following the construction of the Ingalls Building in 1904, most high-rise buildings were made of steel.

1908

In 1908, Thomas Edison designed and built the first concrete homes in Union, New Jersey.

1920

In 1920, Scofield moved the company to Los Angeles, with the belief that the southern Californian market would be open to decorative concrete.

1926

The first concept of transit mixer was also born in 1926 in the United States.

1930

In 1930, air-entraining agents were developed that greatly increased concrete’s resistance to freezing and improved its workability.

In 1930, air entraining agents were used for the first time in concrete to resist against damage from freezing and thawing.

1936

In 1936, the first major concrete dams, Hoover Dam and Grand Coulee Dam were built.

1950

Since 1950, the cement industry has seen massive growth as our world has urbanized.

While he had initially started working with a single wooden blade, he eventually set up two blades which were set apart approximately the width of a brick; the final step was to set up platform stamps which could imprint multiple units at a time. It was in the 1950’s that Bowman had started experimenting with ways to produce patterns on concrete on a larger scale.

1956

In 1956, the owner of Stegmeier Co., Bill Stegmeier, installed the first ‘Cool Deck’ to build swimming pool decks.

1962

Construction in 1962 of Bertrand Goldberg’s 60-story Twin Towers in Chicago sparked renewed interest in using reinforced concrete for high-rises.

1963

The first concrete domed sports arena, known as the Assembly Hall, was built at the University of Illinois in 1963.

1970

He quickly recognised the potential this presented and having patented the process, in 1970 he set up a franchise network across the USA. By now there was a variety of patterns replicating natural stone / brick finishes, all produced using these somewhat cumbersome aluminium moulds.

The market for stamped concrete grew immensely in 1970.

He continued refining the Bomanite Imprint Systems, as the cast-in-place, colored, textured and imprinted architectural concrete paving system was called, until 1970 when the Bomanite Corp. was established.

In the 1970's, fiber reinforcement was introduced to concrete.

1980

In the 1980's superplasticizers were introduced as admixtures and the "highest strength" concrete was used to build Union Plaza in Seattle WA.

1991

The polished concrete trend began in Europe in 1991, about eight years before appearing in the United States.

1992

In 1992 the tallest reinforced concrete building in the world was built in Chicago, Illinois (946 ft.).

1997

At World of Concrete in 1997, they unveiled their 1/4-inch-thick stamped concrete overlay.

1999

In 1999, Polished concrete was first introduced in the United StatesA. by HTC, a swedish company.

2000

In 2000, Home Depot signed up as the first large-scale company to convert to polished concrete floors.

More evidence can be found that Romans used a primal form of concrete about 2000 years ago to build the Coliseum and the Pantheon in Rome.

2001

In 2001 Gerry developed Spray-Top, a revolutionary polymer-modified cement that can be sprayed over stamped concrete surfaces for restoration without losing the stamped texture.

2011

The world’s tallest structure (as of 2011) was built using reinforced concrete.

2014

In 2014, around 4.2 billion metric tons of cement were produced.

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Headquarters
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Decorative Concrete competitors

Company nameFounded dateRevenueEmployee sizeJob openings
Craftsmen Remodeling----
M&M Contracting1982$5.9M50-
MILLER CONTRACTING GROUP1973$1.1M20-
H&H Homes1991$22.7M1673
Grace Construction Management-$69.2M31-
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J G Construction-$420,00050-
Complete Construction Co. Inc.-$1.4M15-
Innovative Construction Group2009$15.0M350-
Cobra Construction1986$64.0M502

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Decorative Concrete may also be known as or be related to Decorative Concrete and Decorative Concrete & Resurfacing.