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MC Magazine |
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Then & Now
Since its very beginnings, Independent Concrete Pipe Co. has exhibited its pride in product as well as employee.
("Then") By Ron Hyink and ("Now") By Greg Snapper
Then
Long before concrete
vibrators or even an
efficient means of
transporting heavy
concrete products came
into existence, Independent Concrete
Pipe Co. of Indianapolis had been
churning out quality reinforced pipe. It
was a time when work was considered
duty, when full-service filling stations
and early morning home deliveries of
fresh milk were the norm.
When Howard Schurmann founded
the company in 1912 and for several
years afterward, there was no actual
factory but rather a “general office” from which all things were issued for
production at the job site. These
included batching equipment, forms,
tools, field superintendents and explicit
directions on everything from personal
conduct to mixing, forming and
installing pipe as well as dealing with
contractors, laborers and the public at
large.
The company’s “Manual of
Instructions for Field Superintendents,”
published in 1928, accompanied the
superintendent to aid in his success (as
well as the company’s) as he ventured
out to the project site. Another book,
titled “Independent Concrete Pipe for
Permanence,” also published in 1928,
offers a glimpse into the manufacture
of quality concrete pipe and includes
detailed photographs from that period.
Leafing through these books today is
like peering into another era, another
world where precast concrete
production was infinitely more
complicated, yet the company’s
expectations of top-notch quality in the
product as well as the employee was
unquestionable. For example, the
Manual left little doubt about the
company’s expectations of moral
character: “We have no place in our
organization for the individual who
does not care to arouse his progressive
spirit. Your company desires in its
organization only men who can, and
will, extend cooperation to their fellow
workmen; who will recognize and
extend courtesies; and who have sufficient strength of character to
overcome temptation. …”
The job of field superintendent called
for a higher caliber of person, because
the position carried enormous
responsibilities. He was expected to set
up shop at a distant location to
manufacture concrete pipe on site, and
this included everything from
employing laborers to purchasing
cement and aggregate from the local
area. As he made his way to the
construction site, typically by rail, the
Manual directed that he first secure
temporary living quarters for himself, then find more permanent digs in which
he could move his family at company
expense for the duration of the project:
“Secure permanent living quarters as
soon as possible. …”
“Your ordinary and necessary
traveling expenses for yourself and
family, as well as three days’ hotel
expense, will be allowed you. …”
The Manual continues its discourse
on meeting the contractor, where and
how to set up for production, hiring
and paying laborers, tips on batching
the proper mix, preparing reports,
paying bills and tidying up after the job
was done. Even the quality of mixing
water was deemed very important,
wherever it could be found:
“In the event you find it necessary,
or more advantageous, to secure your
water supply from private property
owners, precautions must be made to
prevent damage to their property.”
Laden with the funds to carry out the
project, the field superintendent was
required to open a bank account locally
from which he could pay the bills, and
cost consciousness was a constant
priority. When things got dicey and he
needed advice or anything else from
the general office, depending on the
urgency, a special delivery letter would
do, or in a case that demanded
immediate attention, a long-distance
telephone call, albeit costly, was
allowed as long as he knew where
to reach his field representative.
Telegraph was another option:
“A straight wire, which contains ten
words, is the most expensive of the
telegraph forms and should only be
used where immediate action is
required. …”
Such is the way it was back in the
early days of Independent Concrete
Pipe Co. and the precast pipe industry.
The demand for quality was high, yet
the level of technology to achieve it
was low, which
points to the
extreme effort
required to
achieve that
quality. There
were no
vibrators to
make a
production
worker’s life
easier, so to
attain the desired
quality, air
pockets and voids
had to be
eliminated by spading after each batch
had been placed. This method gave way
to tamping machines with wooden
sticks that packed the concrete in the
form, but the tamping machinery
practically begged for constant
maintenance.
By that time, though, production
had migrated from field to factory.
It was during the next couple of
decades, in
the ’30s and
through the ’40s, that
concrete plants
sprang up
along railroad
tracks. This
adaptation
brought
Independent’s concrete pipe production to more
centralized locations as materials such
as bulk quantities of bags of cement
could be delivered much more
economically.
Soon after that, paddle mixers
brought some measure of automation
as well as increased production. And
before long, trucks and trailers had
been developed to haul bigger and
heavier products farther down the
road, which increasingly diminished the
need to build plants near railroad
tracks.
By the 1950s, the precast industry
was emerging out of its labor-intensive
methods of production and into newer
technologies and automation to secure
increased efficiency, fewer breakdowns
and enhanced safety. Out went the
tamping machine, and in came vibration technology as well as the packer head
and dry-cast production. Those
advances along with the overhead
crane helped bring production indoors.
It was during this time that
Independent’s ownership went from
Schurmann to Sherman – Sherman E.
Johnson, that is, a road builder who
started a pipe company in Toledo,
Ohio, before he purchased
Independent.
Johnson’s descendents still run the
business today. “My great-grandfather
was Sherman E. Johnson,” said Scott
Bundrant, COO of Independent
Concrete Pipe. “I’m the fourth
generation. You know it’s rare for
companies to get into the fourth
generation.”
Bundrant explained that the family
always tried to treat it as a business
first but never lost sight of the fact
that the employees are a part of the
family. “So it’s really a family within a
family,” he said. “We’ve been very
fortunate from that standpoint.”
Employee longevity is a great
indicator of this “family experience”
and reciprocal dedication between
company and worker. Bundrant tossed
out a couple of examples, such as an
employee in Toledo who started
working for the company at age 16 and
recently retired. “He was literally offloading
the rail cars with bags of
cement,” he said. “That was his first
job. All week long, all he did was
throw the 50-pound bags of cement off
the rail car.”
An even more remarkable example is
Jeff Davis, Bundrant’s predecessor as
vice president of the Indiana division, who started out at the age of 19 as a
truck driver and retired 42 years later.
Davis handled every job that came up:
truck driver, yard manager, plant
manager, operations manager, then to
the vice president level. “He was my
father’s right-hand man before he
retired,” said Bundrant. “He had a
fantastic reputation in the business too.
Everybody knew him across the
country, because he was so
knowledgeable about the operations.
We miss him every day.”
Another facet that has made
Independent such a success over the
years is acquisitions and new markets.
But these were not done without a lot
of thought and planning. “If the right
fit comes along, we’ll do some
acquisitions, but our method of
operation is not growth through
acquisition,” said Bundrant. “Our
method of operation is to improve and
get better at what we do in the
markets we’re in.”
And really, Independent is one of the
largest pipe producers on the
continent, although considerably
outdistanced by large corporations
such as Rinker and Hanson. “We’re one
of the few truly multi-plant family
businesses left,” said Bundrant, but he
gives due credit to the larger
corporations. “I think the Rinkers and
the Hansons are good for our industry
because they bring the financial
backing to it the right way, and quite
honestly they can be very helpful in
sharing their expertise when it comes
to quality.”
And it always comes back to quality.
It’s an integral part of Independent’s
legacy, and a pivotal point for its
future as it tests new precast markets,
such as bridges. “We are not going to
try to make a financial statement
impact in the first year,” said Bundrant.
“We want to learn how to build the
product. We want to learn how to
market the product and do it the right
way and ease our way into it. We’re
not doing cannonballs into any pool –
we’re going to make a little ripple and
see how it goes and try to grow slowly
through that.”
Since its very beginnings, the
company has insisted on quality
products, above-average employees, a
family atmosphere and sure-footed
growth. All along the way, it has had
its own way of doing things, making a
truly Independent Concrete Pipe Co.
Now
The Independent Concrete Pipe Co. started out in a small general office in Indianapolis. That was in 1912, when the site served as the central nervous system for operations. Everything from materials requests to dealing with contractors, laborers and the public cycled through there. But now that office building has long since been demolished. Over the last several decades, the company has expanded considerably, but it kept its Indianapolis headquarters.
Beyond the Hoosier capitol, Independent now operates seven additional plants that serve Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, Missouri and Illinois. It’s considered one of the largest precast pipe companies on the continent, and it still applies the same business methodology today that it did nearly a century ago.
The company’s method of operations, or better yet its mantra, is “to get better at what we do in the markets we’re in.” Transformed from a small family-run outfit capable of small but quality work in the early 20 th century, Independent’s M.O. has led the now multimillion dollar company to some of the nation’s most visible construction projects. Two of these projects are taking place right now, practically in the company’s own back yard: a new stadium and a new airport.
Lucas Oil Stadium
Indianapolis, an amateur sports haven and home to a handful of professional teams, will open a new football stadium for the NFL’s Colts in August 2008. Working for years with the municipality, Independent snagged the precast pipe work for the downtown project. The pipe sizes and quantities were varied and applications unique. Thousands of feet of pipe were specified to relocate an interwoven series of brick and mortar sewers in the center of the site.
Beneath the 25-acre downtown site, the sewers, which rivaled the age of Independent itself, conjoined where architects envisioned the playing field – 25 feet below street level. At varied depths between 10 and 25 feet, a lattice of 102-, 54-, 36- and 24-inch main and lateral brick sewers interwove like a series of freeways. At depths that would otherwise halt game play after stadium construction, builders were faced with five sewer relocations before surface construction ensued.
In this relocation maze, neither steel, fiberglass nor plastic was specified. Only precast concrete presented enough advantages for the field design solution.
“The specific site conditions, loads imposed on the pipes and corrosive soils pointed us in the direction of reinforced concrete pipe,” said Stephen Starek, P.E., with VS Engineering of Indianapolis. “We specified concrete specifically because of our firm’s past experience with reinforced concrete pipe.”
Independent cast two 45-degree bends and a T-manhole to connect the 102-inch RCP sewer in the northwest corner. Precision manufacturing, engineering and installation gave Starek and V&S what they wanted: a functionally safe 90-degree turn for the 102-inch relocation.
“We drilled partially into the wall of the 102-inch pipe and installed brackets and a steel rod to hold the pipe from coming apart from the bend elements,” Starek said. “On the spring line of the pipes, we installed three tie bars upstream and downstream of the bends just to hold it all together.” Starek said clamping the pieces together strengthened the joints. “Once fully operating, those pipes will run near to capacity, and when water flows around that corner, it will exert significant force on those joints.” With the bend strong and safely completed, V&S Engineering could add Lucas Oil Stadium to its roster of successes.
Precast concrete manufacturers, on the other hand, tend to measure success by their bid packages, craftsmanship and, of course, dollar signs. Independent Concrete Pipe Co. of Indianapolis gauges success by the bottom line too, but for the stadium, the company wanted constant product supervision on the job site, so they turned to their long-time installation expert, Terry Spencer.
Spencer is field service representative with Independent for Lucas Oil Stadium. As on-site inspector, Spencer was the watchful eye over RCP delivered, installed and backfilled. Keeping tabs on the near-simultaneous installations across the site meant his reactions and judgment had to be right on. He said the concrete pipe may represent Independent’s craft, but what’s on the line is the credibility of the precast concrete pipe industry.
“My first responsibility at the job site is to the contractor,” Spencer said. “Keep in mind, however, that when the contractor is gone, Independent’s pipe will still be in the ground representing the concrete industry.”
And the pipe will be there well beyond our lifetimes, said Eric Carleton, P.E., also with Independent. “Competitors say precast pipe will corrode or it isn’t as tough as specifiers’ and manufacturers’ claims,” Carleton said. “But here comes a major municipality building a stadium, and they’re building with precast concrete.”
The Indianapolis Department of Public Works has “all the confidence in the world” with New Indiana Stadium’s concrete pipe infrastructure. Sandy Shafer, senior construction project manager for DPW, said below-ground construction had its share of difficulties, but companies like Independent helped make it a success.
New Indianapolis Airport
And that reputation has recently brought Independent another project – infrastructure work for a billion-dollar airport expansion. In Indiana these days, the airport business is strong. Indianapolis, America’s 12 th largest city with the world’s eighth busiest cargo airport, is currently expanding its airport.
An expansion is the loosest sense of the term, but more accurately, Indianapolis International is starting from scratch. In a more centralized location than the current Indianapolis International Airport, the New Indianapolis Airport will stretch twice the size of its predecessor. Its 1.2 million-acre lot sits midfield, conveniently located between a pair of two-mile-long runways. Benefits of the new locale include aircraft taxi times shaved in half, and more gates, concessions and services. The new airport will be big, and so will its price tag. Indiana taxpayers pay nothing directly, but the airlines, federal grants and passenger fees foot most of the $1 billion bill. Integral components of this mega investment include multimillion dollar projects specifying precast concrete, and that’s where Independent comes in.
“We wanted to do as much of this work as possible using local talent, local companies and local resources,” said Greta Hawvermale, assistant project director for New Indianapolis Airport. “So even when we brought in a master architect who was out of this area, we structured the specific construction with different local companies.”
Independent’s strong presence in the local precast concrete market coupled with its years of service to the New Indianapolis Airport owner, Indianapolis Airport Authority, made the precaster a shoe-in for manufacturing.
Independent cast varied sizes of pipe, box culverts, furnished inlets and manholes in a grouping of five different projects. The North Apron Grading, Midfield Terminal Exterior Storm Sewer, Main Entry/Exit Road, Air Side Storm Sewers and Deicing Underground Storage include everything from conveyance structures to pipe infrastructure. All products, ranging from round and elliptical pipe, 15-inch diameters to 66-inch diameters as well as box culvert structures, were manufactured in Independent’s plants in Indianapolis, Louisville, Ky., Maxwell, Ind., and Mishawaka, Ind.
Mark Bloomfield, project executive for construction manager Turner-Trotter Joint Venture of Indianapolis, said containment and treatment are vital in airport construction, where Independent’s products played environmental roles.
In an effort to contain, treat and eventually recycle a polypropylene fluid used for aircraft deicing, twin box culvert runoff channels were built beneath the airport’s new 100-acre concrete apron. When the airport opens in 2008, these channels will keep surrounding streams and aquatic wildlife free from contamination by transferring excess wintertime deicing fluid from the apron to an underground storage container. During warmer weather, it will transfer stormwater.
“Deicing fluid contains a compound of a chemical nature,” Bloomfield said. “So it’s very important to us from an environmental standpoint to capture that fluid before it gets to the water system.”
With the chance to build from scratch, airport officials were steps ahead when they specified Independent’s box culverts to remedy the environmental threat by polypropylene glycol. Box culverts, albeit “underneath” the scenes at the New Indianapolis Airport, serve as environmental safeguards to protect Indy’s water supply and surrounding ecosystem.
The stadium and airport projects are big-ticket items, but Independent Concrete Pipe Co. is up to the task. Not only can it handle the huge quantities of product required from its multiple plants, it has the backing of its great reputation for quality drawn from its long history in the precast industry.
It’s all a reflection of what’s written in the company’s mantra, of what’s instilled in each employee, and what goes into each product during and well beyond the manufacturing stage.
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