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SERVING
SANTA CRUZ &
THE ENTIRE
BAY AREA

SINCE 1928

CA LIC #736486

P.O. Box 2310
Santa Cruz, CA 95063

Tel:
(831) 426-0342

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(831) 426-2451

© 2001-2007
TOM RALSTON CONCRETE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

Bringing the
Seashore Inside
with Decorative
Concrete

The impression of a tidal pool created for an oceanfront house


BY TOM RALSTON

The 1evitt House overhangs a cliff in Santa Cruz and sits about 50 yd (45 in) away from the picturesque surf breaking at scenic Pleasure Point on the coast of California. In late November 2000, we were asked by Santa Cruz building contractor Steve Hansen and Carmel, Calif., architectural designer Dennis Britton to help remodel this house and create something "unique." They asked if it would be possible to fashion concrete in such a way that the interior of the house looked as if it had been worn and washed by the ocean.

We like the aesthetical concept, but how to accomplish it? It took some heavy thinking, a little inspiration, encouragement, discussion, and of course, sample mock-ups to pave the way (no pun intended) to our goals. We began by testing seeding combinations of seashells, aquarium sand, and beach?worn glass on fresh concrete; we tried blending acid stains with various colors; we sprayed liquid retardant, and we even dropped a turkey baster on the fresh concrete surface to mimic the crater like effects seen on seashore rocks. The cratering, however, would appear only in certain areas of the floor in the house. Overall, there would be a series of artifacts placed in the concrete and blended amid a rocklike finish.

SIMULATED CRACKING
As another interesting step in the design, we decided to first set wrinkled plastic and hard foam through the flooring to eventually simulate the random cracking or fissuring in rock. Later, after the flooring was cast, we pulled the foam and filled the remaining fissures with an agglomeration of seashells, glass, and aquarium sand that we had acid stained with a dark brown color. In some locations, fabricators fastened stainless steel gridwork to the subfloors to eventually provide a more structured appearance on completion of the floors. Select portions of the gridded concrete formed were sandblasted with custom?designed motifs to further enhance the floor's appearance.

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