ForConstructionPros.com

Article

  

Decorative Concrete

Bookmark PageBookmark Page Most Read Stories TodayMost Read Most Emailed Stories TodayMost Emailed + -
Updated: July 8th, 2008 05:26 PM EDT

Countertops Coast to Coast

Concrete countertops

concrete countertop
Concrete Connexion completed about 40 feet of precast counter­tops throughout a residential home. Jarman chose a subtle counter­top look for a quiet balance with the client’s rich-grained cabinet woodwork. The island and countertops are 2 inches thick with a 6 degree bevel on all the cantilevered leading edges.
concrete countertop
Diamond D Concrete produced five concrete pieces for an outdoor kitchen. The project included an elevated poured-in-place horseshoe bar with a lower sink section.
Nearby is a small counter near the grill with a concrete couch just beyond.
Concrete countertop
Diamond D Concrete produced this limestone-look precast counter for a small office kitchen.
concrete countertop
A challenging element on this traditional kitchen countertop by Concrete Connexion was the homeowner did not want to change her existing cabinets, so Chris Jarman reinforced them with plywood panels. "In between each cabinet we dropped a vertical plywood panel so the vertical grain of the plywood panels would add support," he explains. "We also put a 3/4-inch layer of plywood panel on top of each cabinet to pull them all together to distribute the weight so that not any one plywood panel would take too much weight."

Related Articles

Read More Decorative Concrete

Spotlight: Mixing

Spotlight: Attachments

So you want to be a distributor...

Rebecca Wasieleski
By Rebecca Wasieleski

Just like snowflakes and fingerprints, no two concrete contractors are alike. Different backgrounds, business models and artistic flair result in a world full of unique countertop creations, customized for homeowners who offer their own vision to contractors for a truly one-of-a-kind piece of art.

Two concrete countertop contractors from opposite coasts and different backgrounds offer two unique perspectives on concrete countertop making. Chris Jarman of Concrete Connexion in Silver Spring, Md., started his career as a carpenter, restoring old homes in the Washington, D.C. area. "I always had an appreciation for the houses built pre-1940," Jarman says. "There was always a high degree of craftsmanship in those houses, and it was always a lot of fun to learn how the old timers did it as we took those houses apart and put them back together."

Jarman's artistic background led him to start drawing plans for his clients' remodeling projects. "I always had an interest in art and always found a reason to go back and have a pencil and paper in my hand for renderings and so on," he says.

When his wife sat on an airplane next to a man who set up concrete countertop manufacturing shops around the country and told Jarman what she learned, he knew he needed to bring that into his business. "It was a revelation that I could make concrete countertops, concrete fireplaces and objects of concrete art. It was an 'ah ha!' moment for me," he says. "I found a way to be a working artist and actually earn a living doing it and doing something I really loved."

Dave Pettigrew of Diamond D Concrete in Capitola, Calif., first worked as a journeyman carpenter but moved into concrete after he realized he could do a better job building foundations than the guys doing the foundations he was building houses on. "I started digging footings, setting up forms, pouring concrete into forms and I fell in love with it," Pettigrew recalls.

1 2 3 4 5 6 next
[Get Copyright Permissions] Click here for copyright permissions!
Copyright 2009 Cygnus Business Media