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For David Cunningham,
owner of David Jack Corporation located in Studio City, Calif.,
what started as hobbies eventually paved the way for much of the
last 15 or so years of his workleading to his ability to
almost effortlessly make concrete match virtually any color
imaginable.

As for the beginnings of
the company, Cunningham says he and his brother used to be in
the regular concrete business in the metro Dallas, Texas,
area. In the late 70s, we were general contractors building
homes, he explains. And we were always unhappy with the
subcontractors we had doing the concrete work. So we started
with a hands-on approach, doing the work ourselves.
Their hands-on approach
led to pouring foundations, which led to commercial construction
building tilt-up wall buildings and low-cost warehouses, where
they would polish and/or stamp the concrete floors.

We eventually developed
a 1 -inch thick concrete panel that we used to skin buildings,
Cunningham explains. The panels were 10-foot by 20-foot
sections, and then we incorporated that technology into
designing countertops.
But before the
countertops came the building of concrete homes using 3-inch
stamped panels for the exterior, as well as stamping the
foundation for the interior flooring.

They also dabbled in
subterranean houses in
Texasthe
subterranean aspect offered low energy costs and little tornado
risks. We would build a concrete shelter into a hill and finish
it out as living space, Cunningham says. We used southern
exposures for the entrance and windows, and everything else was
underground, including the roof buried under 3 feet of dirt.
One thing led to
another, and soon they built their first dome house, a 60-foot
concrete monolithic dome with stamped concrete floors and
radiant heat.
The dome is durable and
energy-efficient, Cunningham says. Theres little cost to heat
or cool.
One such home is where
Cunninghams brother now lives, complete with a cobblestone
street theme (the interior is 30 feet tall at the highest
point), bedrooms that all face the exterior, and exterior
dormers to make it appear less dome-like. Cunningham likens the
experience to building movie sets, yet another avenue he has
pursued.
Our movie set
background helped, because we knew how to create, he explains.
In that business, anything can be done, and you have to think
outside the boxWe still do that in our decorative concrete
business.
In Hollywood its all
about who you know, and David Jack Corporation started out
building high-end barns for fun due to the brothers interest in
the racehorse business.
When we were in the
racehorse business, we traveled a lot and found the need for
high-end barns, Cunningham says. The barns they built provided
not only security, with resistance to fire and being kicked
through, but they also provided sterility for built-in operating
rooms.
Using 3 -inch steel
frames under concrete, they could also make the barns decorative
to suit the tastes of the owners. We met a lot of people in
the movie industry that way, and pretty soon Hollywood started
calling, Cunningham laughs.
The countertops came in
1982, when Cunningham applied the same concept he used for the 1
-inch panel used for shopping centers to the tombstones he
would make after a pet passed away.
I would grind the
tombstones down and polish them into really cool pieces, he
says. In 82, polymers werent a big thing, and fibers were
just coming outWe had used fibers before in our work, and
working on the tombstones I developed a finishing technique.
Fast forward to today,
when the company is typically booked 60 days out, and the most
popular requests are countertops, floors, commercial spaces
(stained floors), concrete showers/bathtubs, and
fireplaces/surrounds. Cunningham says he also prefers to create
countertops in his shop, but some designers and customers prefer
the hand-troweled finish work thats slightly imperfect, so hes
willing to do cast-in-place as well.

As for popular color
schemes, Cunningham says that gray is still the most popular
color, followed closely by earth tones such as tans and browns,
and the occasional request for bright red or dark green. I work
with a lot of designers and can now match color swatches
exactly, Cunningham adds. I can match anything.
The company recently
finished office space for Disney, with 8,000 square feet of
floors; early next year they will be involved in a brand new
commercial space where theyll be doing bathrooms, countertops,
cutaway sinks and 12,000 square feet of flooring. Cunningham
says hes also been doing several condominium remodels, creating
concrete staircases using an overlay process.
We just do existing stuff now, no more pouring, Cunningham
says. Good thing, otherwise he might not have time to dream up
anything else related to decorative concrete, and that would be
a shame for both his clients and the industry.
David Jack Corporation
David Cunningham
239 W. Olive,
Burbank CA. 91502
(800) 225-8420 Office
(818) 775-0772 FAX
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