San Antonio Construction News August 2016

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Covering the Industry’s News

P.O. Box 791290 San Antonio, Texas 78279-1290

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Volume 18

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Number 8

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AUGUST 2016

A project of his own

Better than the plan

Bob and Yolanda Crittenden will take some time for themselves, as well as spending more time with their grandchildren in retirement.

L-R: Steve Holt, superintendent, and Trey Wiederstein, SCS president, stand on site at the 16,000-sf building pad for Mini Texans Christian Learning Center in Boerne.

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ince the acquisition by Raba Kistner Inc. (RKI), Project Control has been doing very well and strengthened from the standpoint of organization and being able to expand through the pursuit of work in more markets and across Texas. This is according to one of Project Control’s founders, Bob Crittenden, and though he has been doing this for 36 years now, he feels now is the time for the other leaders of the company to have more opportunities to lead as he has in his time as a project manager, vice president, president and CEO, and for the last three years, principal. Retired as of Jun. 30, Crittenden reflected upon the past and present of the company he helped to establish, credit-

ing RKI with the success Project Control has enjoyed doing larger projects in the public sector, such as work for Texas A&M University, Texas Tech University, and the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center expansion. Along with RKI opening up Texas geographically for Project Control, Crittenden credits Dick McNary, one of his former partners and the company’s current COO, with making new connections and associations, particularly in the Austin and Houston markets. Citing the five NBA arenas and several multi-purpose public arenas the company has done since starting to pursue sports-specific projects, Crittenden continued on Page 24

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ince Trey Wiederstein went into business with Ty Tracy, president of Superior Excavation Services (SES), to start Superior Contracting Services (SCS), the new company has met what would have been a fourth or fifth year goal after just two years, exceeding Wiederstein’s expectations for growth. Wiederstein and Tracy had been working together since about 2001 while working for different previous employers. Tracy struck out on his own to start SES in 2007, and when a number of his clients came to him for referrals for general contractors, Tracy approached Wiederstein. A few months later, in February 2014, they were operating as SCS. “Our initial business plan was to be a moderate-sized contractor handling

projects from about $250,000 up to about $2 million in size,” says Wiederstein. “We were planning on an entry into the market doing $3 to $5 million in sales, and we successfully hit that in our first 12 months.” In its second year, the company sales increased 400 percent, and they went from doing $3.2 million to $15 million. Born and raised in San Antonio, with many ties to the local community and industry and working in some form of construction or development since 1991, Wiederstein notes that word got out that he had started the company, and he credits his construction community ties with benefitting SCS’s success. continued on Page 24

Expanding a water wonderland

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he JW Marriott Hill Country Resort just upgraded their guests’ summer fun with a $16.4 million waterpark expansion. Harvey-Cleary Builders started work in September 2015 and completed the project in March, just in time for the spring and summer vacation season. The scope of the project included several different outbuildings and water features spread across a 4.25-acre area of hotel property that was previously just grass before the construction team developed it. All of the outbuildings, including a grill building, a stage, a building providing entry to the waterpark and several poolside cabanas, are wood, but Hayden Boster, project manager, recalls that the most complex portion of the project is a large, steel-structure event pavilion. Designed and constructed to serve the hotel property for event use, such as

Among the features Harvey-Cleary Builders built in the JW Marriott Waterpark Expansion project was a pair of waterslides.

corporate meetings and weddings, the pavilion is a 14,000-sf space with one large room and a full-sized kitchen. With La Cantina glass folding doors on two sides, the building can be used as an indoor space or opened up to the outdoors. The pavilion’s vaulted ceiling meant that stainless steel structural tension rods had to be put in place to support the outward force on the two side walls. A sailboat rigging manufacturer custom built the tension rods, typically used for standing rigging to hold up a ship’s mast. Another interesting feature of the pavilion is the double-sided fireplace. Originally, the team was going to use a specified kit to build the fireplace, but they were unable to do so because of the manufacturer’s lead times. With experience building several large custom fireplaces at Hotel Emma, Boster says that previous project work helped inform their ability continued on Page 24


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