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LASN PMBR News July 200807-18-08 | News



Concrete Industry Braces for Downturn






Edward Sullivan, PCA chief economist anticipates that while harsh residential conditions continue to act as a significant drag on cement consumption, the nonresidential sector will also see large declines for the next two years.


The U.S. economy is suffering from a severe economic weakness and its impact on cement consumption and the construction industry will not be mild, according to the latest Portland Cement Association (PCA) forecast of cement, concrete, and construction.

In 2008, portland cement consumption is expected to drop 11 percent, followed by an additional 5.5 percent in 2009. PCA predicts total cement consumption in this year to be 101.7 million metric tons.

A record consumption of 128 million metric tons was reached in 2005. Peak-to-trough declines in consumption will total nearly 30 million metric tons, marking one of the worst industry downturns since the Great Depression.

“We are currently in the third year of a four-year industry contraction that began in 2006,” Edward Sullivan, PCA chief economist said. “High fuel prices, slow job creation, and tight lending standards will all adversely impact the entire spectrum of construction activity.”

“Although it grew nearly 11 percent in 2007, nonresidential construction spending is expected to fall almost eight percent in 2008 and another 12 percent in 2009,” Sullivan said. “Nonresidential construction is closely tied to economic activity. As the economy softens, the expected return on commercial investments decline, reducing the incentive to build and expand.”

An additional slowdown in public construction, which accounts for nearly half of total cement consumption in the United States, is predicted for 2009 and will continue through 2010.

PCA targets the second half of 2010 with the trend of strong growth in cement consumption. By this time the United States should be experiencing a recovery in housing and nonresidential construction.

For more information on PCA forecasts go to newsroom@cement.org

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L.M. Scofield Company Announces First Annual Decorative Concrete Awards









L. M. Scofield Company is excited to announce their new Decorative Concrete Awards program. Scofield is the Number One Brand in the Decorative Concrete industry, but couldn’t do it without their loyal network of dedicated Contractors, Architects, Designers and Distributors! So now is the time to shine the spotlight on them, to showcase their best work and give them some much-deserved recognition. Concrete Contractors, Architects and Designers from across the U.S. are cordially invited to submit their best Decorative Concrete projects using Scofield Systems. Submittals may be made in three categories:

  • Residential
  • Commercial
  • Unique Application

To be eligible, projects must be completed between September 30, 2007 and September 30, 2008. Grand Prize to be awarded at the World of Concrete in 2009.

For more information visit the contest web page at www.scofield.com/dcawards






Mauling the Mall? Don't Change The Bricks






Lawrence Halprin, the renowned landscape architect who designed the Downtown Mall, urges the city not to change the size of the bricks as part of its proposed $7.5 million renovation.


While discussing the proposed $7.5 million renovation of the Downtown Mall, city planners and the MMM Design Group, the Norfolk-based design firm contracted to do the work, have repeatedly vowed to remain faithful to the original Lawrence Halprin design. Interestingly, no one bothered to consult Halprin himself.

Reached at the California studio where he’s busy working on his memoirs, the 92-year-old landscape architect says he was unaware of the current plan to update his 1976 Charlottesville Mall design.

Still, it wasn’t unfamiliar news. Quite a few of his landscapes have been renovated and altered over the years—and in 2003, the same year he received the National Medal of Arts from President Bush, the nation’s highest honor for artistic excellence, his Skyline Park in Denver was demolished.

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Halprin, perhaps now best known for his sprawling memorial to FDR in Washington, says he has “fond memories” of his Charlottesville project, and he recalls the success of workshops among city planners and citizens.

“I’ve always been proud of my design for the Downtown Mall,” says Halprin. “It remains close to my heart.”

In recent years, Halprin has been widely recognized as a trend-setter for his work shaping public spaces. His Ghirardelli Square in San Francisco is widely cited as the first big adapted factory to merge public and private realms, and his Park Central Square in Springfield, Missouri, was recently made eligible for the National Register of Historic Places, despite being only 38 years old.

“Normally, places have to be at least 50 years old to be eligible for the register,” says UVA architecture professor Elizabeth Meyer, “but because of Larry’s reputation and status as a master, they’re making an exception.”

Source: The Hook, Charlottesville, Va.




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