Calgary Herald

CEMATRIX LEADING SUPPLIER OF CELLULAR CONCRETE

Calgary-born company recently won awards of $8.1 million in new contracts

- DAVID PARKER David Parker appears regularly in the Herald. Read his columns online at calgaryher­ald.com/business. He can be reached at 403-830-4622 or by email at info@davidparke­r.ca.

Founded in Calgary in the early 2000s, despite the ups and downs of our economy, Cematrix has become a North American leading manufactur­er and supplier of technologi­cally advanced cellular concrete products that today is a cash flow positive company and continues to grow rapidly.

Cellular concrete is a constructi­on material consisting of cement, water, a specialize­d preformed foaming agent and compressed air.

It provides the infrastruc­ture constructi­on market with a lighter, better, overall/cost-effective solution with a wide variety of applicatio­ns, including the backfill of overpasses, bridges, mechanical­ly stabilized earth panels and tunnels. It is also used in highways, runways and facilities that are constructe­d over weak, unstable, frost or seismic prone soils as a floating sub-base, an insulator, or both.

Today, Cematrix has grown, due to the discovered benefits of cellular concrete and some strategic acquisitio­ns in the U.S., but it has had its challenges.

Jeff Kendrick, president and CEO, well remembers coming close to having to shut down in 2003-04, taking the company public in 2005-06 and being able to boast of making money the following year.

Then came the 2008 crash and with the majority of his clients in the oil and gas industry, he had to start all over again. Another dip suffered in the oil and gas industry in 2013-14 was another blow, but undaunted and pressing on with the help of the Business Developmen­t Bank of Canada, the former Alberta Opportunit­y Company, and some believing and supportive shareholde­rs, Kendrick began to experience growth again.

His business career began as a chartered accountant, recruited while a student at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay by the Calgary office of Pricewater­housecoope­rs. He moved on from the accounting firm to become the CFO for Jager Industries, a Calgary family-owned company that became a major Canadian player in land, manufactur­ing and housing.

Kendrick was persuaded by some of his hockey-playing pals to launch a startup company in producing aerated concrete products, and with good engineers and his experience in the financial aspects of running a business, Cematrix was born.

It has been a remarkable climb for Cematrix that recently won awards of $8.1 million in new contracts.

“We are pleased to announce that these projects are from across North America and include tunnel backfill, geotechnic­al and energy infrastruc­ture projects,” says Kendrick. “Cematrix's Canadian bids to the end of May 2021 were 81 per cent higher compared to 2019 and 2020 totals, providing further evidence that the Canadian market is rebounding after COVID-19 delays.”

Cematrix cellular concrete is made on-site using mobile batch plants. Today, it has 18 units spread across North America, totally mobile to deliver cost-effective, environmen­tally friendly, innovative solutions to a broad range of problems facing infrastruc­ture, industrial and mining, and commercial markets, wherever they are needed. Major recent acquisitio­ns of two of the four leading U.S. suppliers, Chicago-based Mixonsite and Pacific Internatio­nal Grout of Bellingham, Wash., have helped Cematrix become North America's largest cellular concrete company, with 85 per cent of the company's sales south of the border.

Besides its U.S. offices, Cematrix has Canadian operations in Vancouver, Winnipeg and Toronto, and Kendrick and his team are looking at internatio­nal expansion. He is confident that the Calgary-led provider of cellular concrete will become a $100-million company within the next five years.

NOTES:

Calgarians continue to make a difference to this city with generous donations that will be felt for years to come.

The Brawn Family Foundation has gifted the Calgary Zoo with new support that will enable the zoo to give Dinny the Brontosaur­us a much-needed makeover.

Born in 1937 at 10-metres tall, 33-metres long and weighing in at 120 tonnes, Dinny is looking his age The Brawn family's donation will cover the cost of restoratio­n plus a new dedicated green space around the much loved “pet” of so many children.

And the Calgary Philharmon­ic Orchestra is pleased to report that its Ad Astra: Building to

New Heights capital campaign has received donations of more than a quarter of a million dollars in recent months. Spruce Meadows co-founder Marg Southern says, “I'm giving my support because of the importance of having a sustainabl­e orchestra for Calgary. The ripple effects extend far beyond the concert hall to have a lasting, positive effect on our entire community and for the future of this city.”

 ?? CEMATRIX ?? Jeff Kendrick is the head of Cematrix, now North America's largest cellular concrete supplier.
CEMATRIX Jeff Kendrick is the head of Cematrix, now North America's largest cellular concrete supplier.
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