San Antonio Construction News February 2019

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Covering the Industry’s News

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CONSTRUCTION

The Industry’s Newspaper www.constructionnews.net H (210) 308-5800 H Volume 22 H Number 2 H FEBRUARY 2019

Beyond the green stuff

Greatest generation marble

Justin Hitchcock, president/CEO of JTEX Contracting Incorporated

L-R: Rey McMunn (head of installations); Mark McMunn (head of operations); Joe Centeno (head of production) of M&M Marble

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ometimes people refer to hydro seeding as “spraying out the green stuff,” but Justin Hitchcock didn’t know what that “green stuff” or the technique was until he came across it during a trip to Mississippi. The discovery occurred when he was visiting his then-girlfriendnow-wife Freda’s father, who was involved with large civil engineering projects for the Corps of Engineers. “There was a guy hydro seeding and people referred to it as spraying out the green stuff,” Justin remembers. “I asked [Freda’s dad] what they were doing and he said he was hydro seeding – where you mix the seed, fertilizer and mulch all together – and he’s applying it to the levee that we built.” What was said next, took a turn

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ince 1989, David Bandy’s insistence on quality service, hard work and responsiveness to client needs remains the company’s credo and has led to Bandy Constructors’ success in a competitive industry. Bandy has grown to be one of the most respected general contractors in Central Texas, with a continually expanding roster of successful projects and loyal clients. Bandy created the company with a belief in old school values of integrity, openness, and responsibility, and with a desire to create a business built on lasting relationships with clients, architects, employees, subcontractors, and local communities. Regardless of the situation, they have preserved what has always been important to their company. To them, these are not values that change from situation to situation or person to person, but rather they are the foundation of their company culture.

toward opportunity. “[Freda’s dad] told me, ‘Can you believe it? I’m paying that guy a million dollars to do that,’” Justin recalls. “I said, ‘Well, I could do that.’” A year later, Justin found himself back in Texas researching erosion control, hydro seeding and the machines used to do so. Justin’s “could do” turned into “would do” in 2008, when he established the familyowned-and-operated company JTEX Contracting Incorporated. Justin is the current president and CEO. “Fast-forward to 11 years later and we’ve got three hydro seeding machines, two tractors, a drill seeder and two bail processors. We just kept growing and rolled with it,” he says. continued on Page 21

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om Brokaw wrote a book called The Greatest Generation. It’s about those who came back from World War II and built so much of post-war America. William McMunn, Sr., was one of them. He enlisted in the Navy at age 36 in 1942. Despite his age, the Navy needed skilled craftsmen to serve in the Seabees (construction battalion). After his training in Rhode Island, McMunn’s Seabee unit was sent to Iwo Jima in February 1945. Their mission was to build the runways and infrastructure for the B-29s used on the bombing runs over mainland Japan. But first, the Marines had to capture the island. The Marines landed around 0900. The Japanese didn’t attack right away (they were waiting until the beach was clogged

with people and equipment with no place to run or dig in), so the Seabees were sent ashore. McMunn was on this first wave when the Japanese attacked. The battle of Iwo Jima raged for over a month. Armed with only a .45 caliber pistol, McMunn somehow survived and returned to San Antonio to work for the Vermont Marble Company after the war, the company for which McMunn worked prior to enlisting. Vermont Marble decided to decrease its footprint in Texas, but still needed folks to install the products they made back in Vermont. Sensing the opportunity, McMunn started M&M Marble in 1950, the other continued on Page 21

In time for school Specializing in all types of commercial general construction and construction management in both the public and private arenas, the Dr. Linda G. Mora Elementary School was a good fit for Bandy. The new construction project was approximately 101,000sf with a footprint of 81,000sf. The ground-up project included new infrastructure, utilities, site work, playscapes and a complete landscape and irrigation package. Mora Elementary School also included a complete commercial kitchen, elevator and specialty gymnasium equipment. Bandy’s workforce performed 15 percent of the work on this project. With work beginning in March 2017, the project was completed in August 2018 in time for the 2018-2019 school year at a cost of $22.465 million. The structure was comprised of a pier supported slab-on-grade; elevated Dr. Linda G. Mora Elementary

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