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Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

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Page 1: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Load Bearing Surface Treatments

MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003

Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Page 2: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Panel Chair:

• Stirling Shelton

Lead Technical

Director:

Cincinnati Playhouse

in the Park,

Cincinnati, Ohio

Page 3: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Presenter:

• Greg Bell

He is an Associate Professor and Technical Director at Otterbein College in Westerville Ohio.

Page 4: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Presenter:

• Tracy Fitch

Technical Director

University of North Carolina, Charlotte

Page 5: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Presenter:

• Katherine R. SiegShe is a sophomore at

Otterbein College and has previously worked for The Huron Playhouse, The Sandusky State Theatre, and The Great Lakes Theater Festival.

Page 6: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Presenter:• Claire Dana

Claire Fretts Dana is in her fourth year as the Charge Scenic at Indiana Repertory B.A. (1987) in English from Oberlin College; and has painted and charged for several regional theatres and studios.

Page 7: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Presenter:

• Michael Powers

Michael is the Technical Director at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Prior to that he has spent most of his 35+ year career in professional theatre as a technical director.

Page 8: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

OK, Lets talk TECH!

Page 9: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Greg Bell

Using the sprayed-on stucco mix over metal lathe (the same technique Katherine Sieg has used on her rigid facings) attached to a plywood armature-type structure. The stucco has cracked and crumbled away at the top portions of the "rock", where I stood on it after it had cured for a couple of days.

Page 10: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Greg Bell

Page 11: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

What does NOT Work:• I started thinking about

regular old papier mache. "Sculpty-Mold" or something like that, that was basically a dry form of papier mache. "Just add water and press into a mold"... The "paper" in this dry stuff was almost in powder form. It was too expensive for theatre use, but I thought maybe I could duplicate it somehow.

Page 12: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

TRY it again!• I had used some blow-in

cellulose insulation at home that was pretty powdery, so I bought a bag of it and started mixing it with various binders. I mixed it with joint compound, latex paint, yellow glue, and wheat paste. I troweled the mixtures over a plywood armature covered either with multiple layers of chicken wire or that stucco mesh. None of the mixtures became rigid or able to bear much of a load.

Page 13: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Tracy: • The elastomeric roofing compound we used was

called Kool Seal. EPS foam hand-sculpted with saws and sandpaper.

• It's not the easiest to mix but certainly easier than joint compound. We pretty much poured off half a bucket of the elastomer into another 5 gallon and then made the whole batch in the 2 buckets. We were hand-mixing with a good solid 1x2.

Page 14: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

UNC, Charlotte’s Inexpensive Flexi Glue

1) 5 Gallon bucket of inexpensive elastomeric roofing compound from your local home improvement center

1 Gallon bucket of fine powdered sawdust (imagine you've been cutting a heck of a lot of mdf--use that)

3/4 of a gallon of play sand

1 dash of scenic paint to add a slight base color

Add cheesecloth for detailed edges or broadcloth for sturdy walkable areas.

Page 15: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Application:

Smear on a thin layer (less than 1/8"). Apply cloth working it into the goop. Apply a second thin layer for smoother scenery or a thicker layer to texture. For heavy texture it might be best to do the thin coat and let it dry. Then apply again over the top of the whole mess.

Page 16: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

http://www.koolseal.com/home.asp

MSDS is athttp://www.koolseal.com/content/msds63-600.pdf

Kool Seal

Page 17: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Presenter:

• Katherine R. SiegShe is a sophomore at

Otterbein College and has previously worked for The Huron Playhouse, The Sandusky State Theatre, and The Great Lakes Theater Festival.

Page 18: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Technology Exhibit 2003

Exhibit Number 21:

Rigid facing using sprayed on stucco compound.

Materials:

Stucco Net (metal lathe)

Base-coat Stucco Mix (80 lb bag)

Drywall hopper gun

Page 19: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM
Page 20: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM
Page 21: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM
Page 22: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM
Page 23: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Presenter:

• Michael Powers

Michael is the Technical Director at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Prior to that he has spent most of his 35+ year career in professional theatre as a technical director.

Page 24: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Information complied by Stirling

POLYGEM, Inc. www.polygem.com Ph: (630) 231-5600

Polygem, Inc. manufactures epoxies, vinyl-esters and silicones for various industries and markets such as: Construction, Waterproofing, Mining, Industrial, Electrical, Zoological, Golf and DIY. Polygem, Inc. has been custom formulating epoxies in excess of twenty-five years and has created over 1,500 unique formulations.

Polygem, Inc. continues to reformulate and improve existing products to meet current test standards and industry demands. Polygem, Inc. produces only 100% solid epoxies of the highest possible quality utilizing the finest raw materials and ingredients available.

Polygem, Inc. develops, manufactures, packages and ships all products direct from our 25,000 square foot facility in West Chicago, Illinois located 30 miles west of Chicago. A strict quality control program inspects each product for consistency, color and stoichiometry ensuring product performance and customer satisfaction.

Page 25: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Information complied by Stirling

The Tree was made with:

POLYBAC #307: A general purpose sculpturing putty formulated specifically

for artificial exhibit construction. It is a flexible system, exhibiting excellent shock

and impact resistance along with excellent adhesion to any two porous surfaces.

Typical applications include bonding clean metals to concrete, wood, fiberglass,

concrete, gunite, drive-it and each other.

POLYBAC #307 is manufactured of 100% solids, two component epoxy.

All grades are capable of being applied horizontally or vertically and overhead.

Uncured products can be cleaned up with water.

POLYBAC #307-M a thicker version (clay consistency) of #307 has been specially

formulated for overhead applications.

POLYBAC #307-FR is the “Fire Retartent” version of #307.

It has the consistency of “cold taffy” and is the definative product when building indoor

exhibits.

All three of these products can be colored with epoxy pigments or dry pigments.

The cured products may also be coated with epoxy or latex paints.

Page 26: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Information complied by Stirling

Dino-Goo (As seen on the Discovery Channel's Monster House )

Dino-Goo is a thick epoxy paste specially formulated to be easily shaped,

textured and sculpted. Dino-Goo will provide a hard and durable surface

that is sandable, paintable and fire retardant.

Dino-Goo is also known as our #307 FR-Lite which has been used for

artificial environments at leading zoos, aquariums, museums, casinos and

theme parks around the world. Dino-Goo is an easy to mix one Part of A to one Part of B

pre-thickened epoxy paste that is ready to texture or emboss and water can be used as

the release or smoothing agent. Dino-Goo can be pigmented with liquid

or dry powder pigments and can be additionally thickened up to a modeling

clay-like consistency by using the Polygem Thickening Agent. Dino-Goo

will bond to most surfaces including Fiberglass, Foam, metal and concrete.

Dino-Goo can be coated with any paint, urethane, acrylic or latex paint and Dino-Goo

can even accept stains. Dino-Goo is available in 2 gallon, 10 gallon and 100 gallon

kits and is available in custom blended batches.

Page 27: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Information complied by Stirling

http://www.demandproducts.com/

Level-All is the latest in a new family of "thixotropic resin" levelers. Thixotropic means that it levels and stays where you put it. It will not move on its own. When you brush it on a foam surface, it minimizes the cut lines and minor imperfections. This is a water-based product that is used in conjunction with a final waterproof coating. It is not waterproof if used alone. It must be coated with a waterproof coating to insure weatherability.

Level-All helps most all coatings adhere superbly.

UreCoat is an emulsion of high-grade urethane and acrylic resins in water. It dries by evaporation to yield a tough, non-yellowing, water-repellent surface with exceptional abrasion resistance and ultra-violet light stability. UreCoat can be tinted.

UreCoat is designed to have exceptional adhesion to many types of foam. The composition of UreCoat still allows the coating to be spray applied evenly wile leaving a smooth, glossy finish, and UreCoat exhibits increased tensile and Ureural strength versus other toxic epoxy coatings. When ambiently cured, UreCoat dries rapidly and exhibits excellent toughness and superb adhesion to other substrates as old concrete and masonry, brick, wood, metals, and many other surfaces.

Page 28: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Information complied by Stirling

http://www.demandproducts.com/

Foam Coating: Not very structural !! :(

Water-based, elastomeric coating. Allows definition to show. For either interior or exterior surfaces. Works well over EPS foam and other surfaces. Dries white. Can be brushed, rolled, or sprayed. Covers 320 sq. ft. at 5 mils

A safe, odorless coating that has been specifically formulated for the entertainment industry to provide a sand-like finish for interior or exterior applications. Stonewall's unique, thin flow quality reveals definition detail when applied over any extruded or expanded EPS foam boards or shapes. Unlike sand stucco Stonewall has an elastomeric characteristic that permits movement, reducing the possibility of cracking. Stonewall comes ready to brush, roll, or spray on EPS with little preparation.

Dries clear. Water-soluble, flexible shield protects EPS foam for general handling. Will act as an adhesive for applying fabrics if they are applied while Elasta-Shield is wet. Can be brushed, rolled, or sprayed. Covers 320 sq. ft. at 5 mils

Page 29: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Information complied by Stirling

http://www.demandproducts.com/Now these products are hard.

Liquid Rock is a 2-part, epoxy-based coating that can be applied on interior and exterior surfaces. It has extraordinary flow characteristics. It leaves a hard, glossy, smooth shell finish. It works well on props and backdrops when a hard finish is preferred. It can be brushed or rolled. Average working time is 20-25 minutes. One gallon covers approximately 320 sq. ft. at 5 mil thickness.Dries off-white and can be painted

UreShell is our latest offering in fine foam coatings. UreShell is a marvelous hard-coat, 2-part, urethane-based coating. Its average 25-minute pot life allows for rolling or brushing. Applications cover both interior and exterior surfaces. It leaves a hard, glossy, smooth shell finish. It works great on props, backdrops, signs, molds, etc. One gallon covers approximately 320 sq. feet at 5 mil thickness. Dries to a tan color and can be finished-coated with most all paints and synthetic stucco.

Page 30: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Information complied by Stirling

http://www.demandproducts.com/Last product, not great for floors

Styrothane is a 3-part, urethane-based coating that can be applied on interior and exterior surfaces. It leaves a hard, glossy, smooth-shell finish. It works well on props and backdrops when a hard finish is preferred. It can be brushed or rolled. Average working time is 10-15 minutes. One gallon covers approximately 320 sq. feet at 5 mil thickness. Dries off-white and can be painted. Its "tile-like" finish allows easy cleaning.

Page 31: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Claire Fretts Dana

Charge Scenic Artist, Indiana Repertory Theatre

Page 32: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Let it Shine!

1/2” MDF deck was waxed and buffed: mirror image ceiling was sealed with same but finished with gloss acrylic urethane. 3rd show at IRT to have this treatment.

Copenhagen, Set Design by Michael Ganio for IRT, Fall 2002

Page 33: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Conventional Mop Bucket with disposable liner (trash bag)

Nylon, no-loop applicator mop

Commercial floor sealer & “soft” floor wax

Optional “spray and buff” touch-up solutions with spray bottle

Page 34: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

First coat of sealer moved paint applied previously with a Preval sprayer.

No other trouble where encountered.

Page 35: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

The mighty, mighty high speed burnisher: 2000RPM

Electric (pulls about 19amps at startup and 15-17amps while running)

20’ cord

Page 36: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

The pads come in a range of color-coded abrasion types.

We found the pink “eraser” pads worked best for removing most scuffs while restoring a good shine

Page 37: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Maintenance requires a dust mop treated with an attractant;

buffing as needed for scuffs and re-application of wax as needed

Page 38: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

The deck after 25 performances

Page 39: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

You can see some marks will stay, but they are always reduced by buffing and re-waxing. Painted spike marks are not affected.

Page 40: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Wood grain and stone texture using powdered clay

Lion in Winter, set design by Rob Koharchik, IRT 2003

Page 41: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Powdered clay and Flexbond glue was used for wood and stone textures on 3/8” MDF

Page 42: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

The mixture for the deck was 4 parts clay, 2 parts Flexbond and 2-3 parts water

Page 43: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Powdered clay is cheap and easy to get but contains silicates which require respiratory

protection and containment precautions

Page 44: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

We used cut squeegees to grain the planks and brushes and trowels to work the stone tiles

Page 45: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Due to winter shipping restrictions on Flexbond, the last batches made with Elmer’s white glue, clay and no water.

Mixture was stiff and sticky yet settled quite a bit. Horrible to handle.

Page 46: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Another type of stone texture and a paper floor

Cyrano, set design by Rob Koharchik, IRT 2002

Page 47: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Stone texture was done with Jaxsan-600 on 3/8” MDF tiles. 11”x 17” sheets of paper were painted and attached to deck

and sealed with an acrylic wallpaper paste.

Page 48: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Model of Deck with three (3) surface treatments: Painted rough wood planks, grass and stone. “Red Badge of Courage”, Designer:

Rob Koharchik, IRT, 2003

Page 49: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

CDX planks and homasote are the load-bearing substrates laid over the permanent stage. Foam is added in for “stone” facings, as shaping under non-walkable grass and where weeds need to be anchored.

Page 50: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Burlap adhered to homasote and foam with Elmers’s clay mix and/or jaxsan 600; painted “Funeral grass” is stapeled down,

painted rubber mulch helps soften the edges.

Page 51: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Looks just like the model! YEA ! Grass needs some maintenance due to shedding:;blood gets wiped off planks every performance.

Page 52: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Three part ground cloth for “As you like it”. Designer: Bill Bloodgood, IRT

Page 53: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Lots of traffic on 2 curved, raked areas and 1 US ramp. The rakes are triscuit and studwall construction with half-lapped MDF sheets,

a layer of cushy foam for sound quality.

Page 54: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

A full length facing piece was created for each level and upholstered with more painted fabric. Maintenance includes a hot

water spray.

Page 55: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

• Stirling Shelton

Lead Technical

Director:

Cincinnati Playhouse

in the Park,

Cincinnati, Ohio

Page 56: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Macbeth, Brian Jones, Indiana University of Pennsylavina

Page 57: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM
Page 58: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Poly-Kote A product of Poly-Form LLC

1-800-537-3676

• A waterproof cement base sealant in dry powder form.

• Mix in two quarts of water per 50-lb bag. • Contains portland cement and fiber

reinforcing fibers

Page 59: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Poly-Kote Made to be used over polystyrene Surfaces.

Preparation of surfaces: Clean and structurally sound

If over masonry surfaces using a mild solution of muriatic acid, will remove efflorescence.

How to mix: Two quarts of water to a 50-lb bag @ about ($11.95). Add more water if needed to obtain a paste-like consistency. Apply with trowel or spray. One bag will cover 30-50 sq-ft at 1/4” thick. Spray will cover more almost double.

Page 60: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM
Page 61: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Added Cheese cloth between layers of Poly-Kote

Page 62: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Other resources: (go get this book and this product info)

The Epoxy Book,

System Three Resins, INC

206-782-7976

West System,

Gougeon Brothers

www.westsystem.com

989-684-7286

Page 63: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

More resources not demonstrated by panel

http://www.rhhfoamsystems.com

Polyurethane is one of the most remarkable art mediums of the 20th Century and VERSI-FOAM® was used to create all of the examples shown on this page. Compare these features with those of other media:

Easily dispensed. Expands and dries in 60 seconds, workable in 30 minutes.

Moldable, sculptable and accepts virtually any finish material (paint, stains, lacquer).

Rigid, lightweight but finished objects have appearance of great strength, and solidarity. Foam has both flotation and structural enhancement properties.

Page 64: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

VOTON® Foam ConcreteFoam concrete is a low density fill material primarily used in geotechnical applications. The lightweight cementitious fill is made by the injection (or blending) of a pre-formed stable foam into a cement based slurry. The entrained foam used in producing VOTON foam concrete is

PROVOTON - our proprietary, protein-based foaming agent.

http://www.ajvoton.com/foam-concrete.html

http://www.apacheproducts.com/index.htm

Architectural Shapes Information

Apache Products Company- is a leading manufacturer of innovative foam products including custom architectural foam shapes. Apache is ready to provide technical support as well as design services to architects, contractors and building owners to create truly unique architectural and sculptural accents.

Apache custom architectural foam shapes allow contractors to use the lightest weight construction materials in the industry to fabricate unique architectural accents, detailed decorative trim and accurate historic reproductions, for long-lasting interior or exterior use.

Page 65: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

http://www.carpenter.com/Divisions/expdpolysystm.htm

We at Carpenter are proud to be leaders in the Expanded Polystyrene (EPS) industry.

Page 66: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

Structural Skin THE PRODUCT SUITABLESUBSTRATES APPLICATIONMETHODS A fiberglass reinforced, Portland cement based, waterproof coating used to plaster exterior and interior above grade substrates.

http://www.conproco.com

Over 20 Years Experience in research and manufacturing of:POLYURETHANES, POLYUREAS, SILICONES, EPOXIES, ACRYLICS, BUTYLS

and other coatings, resins, binders and foams.

http://www.futuracoatings.com/

Page 67: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

StyroCrete - StyroCrete is a specially formulated, high strenth cement and polymer mix designed to be used as a hard coating over expanded polystyrene foam (EPS) architectural design shapes and building trim. Typical applications include interior and exterior retrofit architectural and building components (i.e. crown moldings, columns, bandings, cornices, balusters, bannisters, window arches, and door trim), signage, theater stage props, movie props, trade show displays, landscape molds, foam letters, etc.

StyroCrete is a high strength polymer cement mix designed to be used with StyroCrete Polymer Concentrate as a coating over polystyrene (EPS) foam trim molding, letters or panels, either interior or exterior. It will increase the integrity and add strength and durability to the surface of amy Styrofoam shape. It may be integrally colored using the Marbelite Tint Kit or may be painted after complete drying.

Marbelite International Corp. 544 Interstate Court, Sarasota, FL. 34240(941) 378-0860 or Toll Free (800) 348-3993FAX (941) 378-9832Website: www.marbelite.com

Page 68: Load Bearing Surface Treatments MCC L 100C, Minneapolis, 2003 Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

http://www.trimroc.com/