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1963

Company Founded in West Sacramento

The company, originally founded as Tecon Pacific in 1963, was located in West Sacramento on a four-acre site with fifteen employees.

1966

Jim Clark Appointed General Manager

In 1966, Jim Clark became General Manager of the architectural precast company Tecon Pacific (now Clark Pacific). The company grew rapidly with the help of many talented engineering, plant and field employees during the pioneering and development stages of architectural precast panelized cladding systems in California.

Late 1960s

Company Develops Colored Precast Mix Designs, Specialized Forming, Handling and Connection Techniques For the Mass Production and Installation of Precast Panels

During the 1960's the company developed some of the region's first pigment colored precast concrete mix-designs. The company experimented with various aggregates and sands to obtain precast concrete panels which closely matched granite, limestone and other natural stone products. The company also developed precast mass production building processes including panelization concepts, casting techniques, panel handling, loading, hoisting and connection processes. Precast panelized building systems replaced the slow, conventional, hand set building process of the day. Precast concrete building panels were approximately 6" thick, 8'-13' wide and 30'-40' long.

1973

Company Opens Irwindale Plant and Mass Produces Modular Apartment Buildings, Modular Classrooms and Modular Prison Cells

In 1973, the company formed a partnership with Forest City Dillon and opened an additional plant in Irwindale, CA. This plant produced and constructed 55 modular precast concrete apartment buildings with over 7000 apartment units, wood and metal formed portable school classrooms and modular prison facilities.

1979

Company Introduces Thin Shell Precast Panel

In 1979 the company introduced their first Thin Shell Precast Building Panel which was approximately 2” thick, 6’ tall and 12’ wide, backed with a steel stud frame. The Thin Shell Precast Panels were one-half the weight of the standard architectural precast panels and permitted structural engineers to design lighter steel frame building structures. The lighter structures resulted in reduced costs on tall structures in zones of high seismic activity. The new panel cladding system was used in 1979 on the Sheraton Hotel Plaza Lareina High-Rise at LAX and on the Warmington Plaza High-Rise in Santa Ana.

1980

Company Lands Contract For It's First Sports Stadium

In 1980 the company landed it's first contract to produce a precast sports stadium for the San Jose State Spartans. Clark Pacific provided precast concrete stairtreads and risers on this project.

Company Introduces Brick Clad Precast Panel System

In the early 1980’s the company began applying Brick Fascia to Architectural Precast Panels. This provided contractors with a rapid construction alternate to hand set brick. Architects could now design building elevations which combined brick, colored precast, natural stones and even terra cotta. The brick panel system was first introduced in 1980 on the Pacific Lumber Building in San Francisco, again in 1984 at Sutter General Hospital and in 1985 on the Portman Hotel in San Francisco.

1981

Company Introduces Glass Fiber Reinforced Panels (GFRC)

In 1981, the company began producing Glass Fiber Reinforced Concrete (GFRC) panel cladding systems. The first panels were sunscreens produced in 1981 for a Sacramento Office Building, followed by major projects in 1983-4 which included the Growers Square Pavilion in Walnut Creek, Chevron Ortho Research Center in Richmond and State Compensation Insurance Fund in Sacramento. The company helped the development of this process on the West Coast and helped to write the first GFRC industry quality control manuals and manufacturing procedures, which are now in use nationwide. GFRC panels were one-third the weight of the standard architectural precast panel and permitted structural engineers to design lighter steel frame building structures, resulting in reduced costs on tall structures in zones of high seismic activity.

The spray into mold manufacturing process permitted Architects almost unlimited shape possibilities. Ornate and elaborate panel shapes of Victorian style were now possible while still retaining the quick modular construction characteristics of the precast concrete panelized building system. The LAX Control Tower and San Francisco Towers Episcopalian Retirement Home are excellent examples of shape possibilities.

1982

Company Introduces Natural Stone Clad Precast Panels

In the early 1980’s the company began applying Natural Stone Veneer to Architectural Panels. This permitted Architects to mix natural stone and complimentary colored precast concrete mix designs. The company developed a large network of stone suppliers and purchased stone domestically and internationally from quarries throughout the USA, Spain, Germany, Italy, India, Argentina, China and other countries. Granite, travertine, limestone and sandstone veneer were added to precast panels.

Clark Pacific's new panel system was first introduced in 1982 on the 655 Montgomery project in San Francisco and in 1989 on the Landmark Square project in Long Beach.

Company Lands First Contract For A Precast Prison Opens The North Sacramento Plant

In 1982, the company landed its first precast prison facility contract at the Vacaville State Prison. An additional precast plant was opened across the river from downtown Sacramento to produce modular prison cells.

1984

Company Opens Fontana Plant

Bob Clark In 1984, the company opened an additional plant in Fontana, CA. This plant was located at a large Kaiser Steel Normalizing Facility, which had been shut down by Kaiser and sold to Tecon Pacific. Don Clark helped open and manage the new plant about a year and a half after he graduated from Stanford. A few years later, Don’s brother, Bob Clark, a recent graduate from San Jose State’s civil engineering school, helped run the Fontana Engineering and Project Management Group. Later, the Irwindale plant was absorbed by the Fontana Operation.

  

1986

Company Introduces Natural Stone On Truss Frame Panel System

In 1986, the company introduced its Natural Stone on Truss Frame Panel System on the Studio Plaza Project in Burbank, immediately followed by use in 1987 on the 505 Montgomery Building in San Francisco near the Transamerica Tower. The Natural Stone on Truss Frame System utilized a truss frame mechanically connected to 1.25” and 2" thick stone. These panels were very light and suitable for economical high-rise structure designs in zones of high seismic activity.

Company Introduces Multiple Colored Architectural Precast Panels

 In 1986, the company introduced its first architectural precast panel with multiple colored mix designs in one panel, allowing Architects to design panels with more than one color. Initially panels had cold joints at color transitions. Later, special casting techniques were developed to pour multiple colored mixes integrally into the panel. This new technique was first introduced in 1986 on the Silicon Valley Financial Center in San Jose, followed by the AST project in Irvine and on the 77th Street LAPD project in 1994.

1987

Company Introduces C-CAPP
(Clark Composite Architectural Precast Panel)

In 1987, the company introduced C-CAPP, which permitted the fabrication of larger panels, thereby facilitating quicker fabrication and construction with a lower cost per square foot. These panels were more flexible and adept at dealing with evolving earthquake design technology. The panel system was first introduced on the Grand Promenade High-Rise on top of Bunker Hill in Los Angeles.

1988

Company Enters Oregon Market At Pioneer Place

In 1988 the company was awarded the contract to construct the original Pioneer Place Retail Shopping Area at 630 SW 5th Avenue in Portland, Oregon. Later in 1998 the company was invited back to Portland to construct a major expansion to this upscale retail center.

Company Forms Miscellaneous Metal Fabrication Subsidiary

In 1988, the company formed a miscellaneous metal fabrication subsidiary, Pacific Embedded Products (PEP). PEP fabricates all the precast concrete panel embedded steel anchors, steel inserts, steel bearing angles and other fabricated metal required for our products. PEP was established to provide critical connection components with stringent inspection and quality.

1995

Company Changes Name To Clark Pacific

In 1995, the company name was changed to Clark Pacific to more closely reflect the name of its owners – Jim, Don, and Bob Clark). The Clark Family has provided continuous management and leadership for over 35 years.

Late 1990's

CLARK PACIFIC Introduces Preconstruction Service Partnering Process

During the 1990’s Clark Pacific further partnered with Architects, General Contractors and Owner/Developers during the initial stages of project development to form state of the art, aesthetically pleasing, economical and constructable fast track, design/build precast cladding systems. Partnering early with Clark Pacific saves Owners and Developers money and time through the early coordination and integration of the cladding panel system with the buildings' structural system. Many Architects, Contractors and Developers began selecting Clark Pacific cladding systems concurrent with their Preliminary Design Process. Clark Pacific’s Preconstruction Service Process streamlined the connection design and interfaces with the structural frame. Panelization concepts are resolved early, saving all parties time and money, and leaving the conceptual panel system design, connection and preweld designs to Clark Pacific.

1997

Clark Pacific Introduces Fast Track Modular Design/Build Building System

In 1997, Clark Pacific developed fast track, turn-key, design/build building systems which integrated the building’s structure and exterior cladding system. It was first used at the Aerojet facility in Rancho Cordova, CA and Adventis pharmaceutical manufacturing facility in Bridgewater, NJ.

Load bearing precast wall building systems removed the need for the conventional steel frame or cast-in-place concrete frames. This new system provided one stop shopping at Clark Pacific for Owners and Developers to obtain building shells, thus eliminating customary interface problems. All structural engineering, fabrication, and construction for the integrated precast building shell was provided by Clark Pacific. Customary design, fabrication and construction schedules were slashed by months with the new building system.

2000

Company Tops 400 Employees

 As of 2000, Clark Pacific employs over 400 engineering, production, construction, office and administration personnel. Field construction operations have expanded from our initial California State Market to the surrounding states of Arizona, Nevada, Oregon and Washington.

 

2003

CLARK PACIFIC Introduces All-in-one "archi-structural" solutions

Combining the strengths of its architectural expertise and extensive structural experience, Clark Pacific began producing structural elements with integrated architectural features including multi-colored panels and other custom finishes - giving architects the flexibility to build architectural and structural functionality into single elements. New efficiencies in design became possible with this advance. The Solano County Government Center Parking Structure in Fairfield, CA was the first to receive this treatment.

2005

CLARK PACIFIC Introduces total precast solutions utilizing the precast hybrid moment frame to the california marketplace

Combining its advances in architectural + structural solutions as well as lessons learned through its on-going involvement in the PREcast Seismic Structural Systems (PRESSS) research, Clark Pacific developed a total precast solution (architecturally finished structural elements including spandrels, columns, beams, and precast flooring) featuring the Precast Hybrid Moment Frame as the seismic resistance system. The first project to utilize the solution was the 800 J Street Lofts in Sacramento, CA.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



During the 80's Clark Pacific helped to write the first GFRC industry quality control manuals and manufacturing
procedures, which are
now in use nationwide.

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