From
Humble Roots As Western Ohio Cement Company, Baker Concrete
Grows To Nationwide Industry Leader
By Mark Rea
From humble roots as a small Ohio cement business, Baker
Concrete Construction Inc. has grown over the last 35 years
into one of the nation's leading concrete construction firms,
specializing in almost every facet of the concrete industry.
As a result, Baker Concrete Construction finished atop the
Texas Construction list of concrete contractors with reported
2002 Texas revenue of $115 million. That total also ranked
the privately owned company fifth overall on the magazine's
Top 125 Specialty Contractors.
Founded in 1968 in Oxford, Ohio, Daniel L. Baker started his
own business with his two brothers as Baker Cement. The Bakers'
grandfather, Elmer, had been a cement and stone mason for
60 years.
The company started handling placement and finish work in
the local residential market. Residential work was later expanded
to include light commercial and light industrial projects,
super-flat industrial floors, concrete paving and site concrete.
Today, total concrete packages, including large superstructures,
parking garages and heavy industrial projects have become
the backbone of the company.
Baker Concrete Construction entered the Texas market in 1981
and quickly established itself as one of the leaders in the
concrete industry. From its headquarters in Houston, the company
has spent the last 22 years building its reputation as one
that can handle projects of any size.
Two recent high-profile projects in the Houston area called
upon Baker Concrete Construction's expertise.
The company performed concrete formwork, placement and finishing
at Reliant Stadium, the $425 million retractable-roof sports
facility that is the new home of the NFL's Houston Texans
and the Houston Livestock Show & Rodeo.
Baker Concrete Construction placed the concrete for the stadium's
four supercolumns, which rise outside the seating bowl and
support the retractable roof.
The supercolumns each rise 150 ft. into the air and contain
approximately 2,000 cu. yds. of concrete.
Situated on the largest of the mat footings, each of which
contain approximately 4,200 cu. yds. of concrete, each supercolumn
is approximately 13 ft. by 75 ft. at the base with 14-in.-thick
walls. Inside the perimeter walls are baffle walls, which
help to move the conditioned air to the upper levels of the
stadium. Each supercolumn tapers as it rises to a size of
approximately 13 ft. by 35 ft. at the top. Placement of the
supercolumns consisted of 15 lifts of 10 ft. each.
Baker Concrete Construction was also involved in one of the
largest continuous mat pours in Texas when more than 12,000
cu. yds. of concrete was poured in just 17 hours for the foundation
of the headquarters of energy giant Calpine Corp.
Although the single mat pour lasted 17 hours, Baker Concrete
Construction officials said that 90 percent of it was completed
in just 13 hours.
Randy Smaltz, project manager for Baker Concrete, said that
because of the cramped location, the pour could employ only
six pumps. He added that his company poured the same amount
of concrete at Republic Bank (a couple of blocks from the
Calpine Center) in just 10 hours, but used twice as many pumps.
Baker Concrete also participated in construction of the new
$177 million Hilton Austin/Fifth Street Tower project, one
of several new high-rise structures in the downtown area of
Texas' capital city and the first in proximity to Austin's
newly expanded convention center.
The new hotel and condominium tower contains more than 62,000
cu. yds. of concrete.
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