A
product on a solid footing
Jim Bradac came up with Ceme-Tube™ after
trying to lay concrete in wet ground. Now, he's
pouring his life into his new venture.
Three years
ago, while laying concrete footings for his family cabin, Jim
Bradac ran into a problem.
The ground was so wet that the cardboard forming tubes
got soggy and useless before he could pour concrete into them.
Wasn't there a plastic tube he
could use instead, he asked his local hardware store? The answer
was no.
So Bradac invented his own: the Ceme-Tube™,
a lightweight but tough plastic tube with three designs for
concrete footings, light-pole bases and protective bollards.
Now, the 44-year-old Hudson, Wis., businessman is
pouring his life into his new venture. After spending three
years getting Ceme-Tube™ ready, he closed his other business
of 17 years, the Hudson sheet-metal shop that supported him,
his wife and six kids.
Bradac is confident - and a little nervous.
He knows it takes time for a new product to seep into customers'
consciousness.
But he believes he's got a winner
given the initial reaction of customers and others in the construction
trades. "People keep telling me that I'm
going to be blown away," he said recently, surrounded
by stacks of his black and reflective yellow Ceme-Tube™ parts
in a Hudson warehouse. He didn't begin selling tubes until
late September because he wanted to have them in stock first,
so he's sold only $8,000 in tubes so far; but he's projecting
revenue in 2008, his first full year, of $500,000 to $1 million,
and doubling the year after that.
The Ceme-Tube™ looks pretty simple. It's made of high-density
plastic that is shoved into a hole in the ground. Construction
workers can pour concrete into the tube to form a footing for
anything from a backyard deck to a building.
The traditional
forming tube is made of cardboard, which is cheap and easy
to peel away afterwards. Most workers call them "Sonotubes," after
the biggest and best-known brand. But the cardboard product
wicks moisture if the ground is wet or if it's raining, Bradac
said. In cold weather, ice crystals can adhere to the cardboard,
causing "friction
frost heaving" when the ground expands that can move the
entire footing.
The
Ceme-Tube™ is waterproof,
of course. The plastic is pliable to minus 30 degrees, and
because it isn't porous, ice doesn't adhere to it, Bradac said.
To
make them easier to use, Bradac has the tubes molded in 4-foot
lengths with built-in collars to make them stackable to up
to 20 feet.
Bradac said his research showed no other plastic forming tubes.
There are waxed cardboard tubes that can be used when wet,
but after three or four days, those soak through.
He's patented his tubes and their features, like the built-in
collar. He's also built a couple of other products upon the
basic Ceme-Tube™.
One is a light-pole base. The part below ground is a basic
blackCeme-Tube™, but the part that pokes up above ground as
the pole's base is a reflective yellow.
Unlike the standard cardboard form, which is peeled away,
the plastic yellow part is designed to remain and be an aesthetically
pleasing design element.
The other is a Ceme-Tube™ bollard,
which also has a safety yellow plastic top and cap that poke
up out of the ground. Bollards normally are steel tubes filled
with concrete, used in parking lots or outside buildings as
protective barriers. Bradac fills his tubes with rebar and
concrete, and because they're made of plastic, they are one-quarter
the cost of steel tubes and don't need to be repainted, he
says.
Although plastic tubes cost more than cardboard, the ability
to use them in wet ground or in the rain saves time and money,
said Bob McElroy, outside sales manager for Brock White Co.,
a St. Paul-based construction materials distributor that is
selling Ceme-Tube™ through
its Upper Midwest and Canada stores.
"It basically eliminates the weather element and speeds
up construction time," he said, adding there is not another
plastic forming tube available for below-grade concrete work
- meaning in the ground.
Farrell Equipment, Cemstone and Advanced Shoring also carry
the products.
Bradac said he got a positive response when he took his product
to the World of Concrete trade show in Las Vegas in January,
setting up a booth and a demo - a conventional cardboard tube
soaking in a clear bucket of water next to his Ceme-Tube™ in
another water bucket. "Paper or plastic?" his banner
read. "The choice is clear."
But his direct competition is enormous. Sonoco Products Co.,
maker of Sonotubes, reported revenue of $3.66 billion last
year.
Bradac has spent a lot of money getting into three architectural
catalogs, and his company already has seen a lift. In August,
architects ordered Ceme-Tube™ for
five projects; in September, that number climbed to 31 and
to another 32 projects in October, he said.
"We're finally getting our break, and the word is getting
out," he said.
Leslie Brooks Suzukamo can be reached at or 651-228-5475.
COMPANY SPECS
Name: Ceme-Tube LLC
Business: Manufacturing plastic forming tubes for concrete
footings, light-pole bases and concrete-filled bollards.
Location: Hudson, Wis.
Founded: May 2007
Employees: Three
2007 revenue: $8,000 to date
Competition: Sonoco Products Co., Caraustar Industries Inc.
and the Newark Group.
Challenge ahead: Building awareness with construction project
managers and architects. |