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EP 36 · 2022-11-07 · 52:43

Hurricane-Proof Concrete Homes Are Coming to Atlantic Canada — Maritech's Residential Tilt-Up Bet (Jim Allison & Phil Farrow)

Maritech Construction's Jim Allison and Phil Farrow lay out their plan to make Atlantic Canada's first residential tilt-up concrete homes — recorded four days after Hurricane Fiona made the case for them.

JA
Jim Allison (Jimmy Allison)
The story, written up — a sharp read with every fact on the record. Or skip straight to the moments that matter, as clips.
Read the article ▸▶ Watch the 14 clips ▸Read the transcriptOpen on YouTube ↗
// CHAPTERS — TAP TO JUMP THE PLAYER
0:00Sponsor intro — Payzant Building ProductsPre-roll for presenting sponsor Payzant Building Products, supplying HRM contractors since 1964.0:26Welcome and Fiona storm damageDan welcomes Phil Farrow and Jim Allison of Maritech; small talk about Hurricane Fiona ripping the metal roof off a Sobeys family horse barn — 'the Yellowstone of Pictou County' — they were working on.2:10Guest backstories: Jim and PhilJim's path: his own A3 Electric/Plexus corporation, then 11 years at RCS Construction where he opened the Moncton office. Phil: hockey at Plattsburgh, then joining his father Brian's new firm Maritech in 2010 as a cold-calling BD guy and later site super.5:05Maritech's niche and the residential tilt-up betRelationship-driven design-build GC doing steel-erected (Robertson) buildings and tilt-up; a confidential large NS tilt-up starting in three weeks; a 150-home single-storey NB subdivision for seniors with in-floor heat cutting energy costs from $300 to $75/month; 100 identical houses, no two looking the same.11:00Founding stories and Jim's un-retirementPhil's first year of door-to-door business development; the milestone 30,000 sq ft Home Hardware store in New Glasgow. Jim's consulting semi-retirement, a big project killed by COVID, then Brian's call in 2019 to transplant his big-company playbook into Maritech.15:15The vision: Atlantic Canada's tilt-up expertsGoal: the biggest, best, most proficient tilt-up contractor in Atlantic Canada — commercial and residential — including erecting tilt-up as a sub for other GCs rather than competing with them. Why it's hard: training, certification and manpower are 'trade secrets'; an Ontario mentor will supervise the first projects and train their crew.20:00Why tilt-up wins right nowCosting is finally nailed down so education and pitching can start; speed is twice as fast; it eliminates trades you can't hire (wood framers won't bid small multi-res, truss deliveries are months out); up to six-storey residential is feasible; design goes to Texas firms Powers Brown Architecture and LJB Engineers, whose 2,000 prior tilt-up designs save money.24:50The European developer and tilt-up 101Maritech pitched the NB developer, who 'understands concrete' and wants houses that look brand new in 20 years; exterior finishes are virtually limitless. Tilt-up 101: sandwich-panel energy efficiency, fast envelope, height and open spans — why car dealerships and Burnside offices use it.28:20Hurricanes, wildfires and first-mover validationPost-Fiona, the climate-resilience case: concrete homes shrug off hurricanes, floods and mold; an Ontario tilt-wall contractor 'gets a call a day from California' about wildfire-proof houses. Supplier Dayton Superior is launching a residential division and tells Maritech 'nobody in Atlantic Canada is doing this — you are so on the right track; first to market is going to be the best.'31:40Building the crew and the timelineLeadership team plus an eight-man field crew to start — enough to 'build an Amazon' — with trained experts seeding future crews in NB, PEI and Newfoundland. Completed residential tilt-up projects visible before spring; they can build all winter. Foundation contractors are 6-12 months out and tender numbers are 'astronomical.'37:40Traction, tenders and the CATT core valuesJim believes in ~70% of Traction/EOS for construction: weekly leadership meetings, rocks, accountabilities. They avoid public tenders ('extra paperwork... a battle' with slim margins against 15-20 GCs) in favour of repeat design-build relationships. Core values CATT — communication, accountability, teamwork, transparency — including showing clients the money they make.43:50The Confederation Bridge storyIn Jim's A3 Electric days they replaced all 471 light fixtures on the Confederation Bridge: light standards had become 'tuning forks' in the Northumberland Strait wind; their in-progress ISO certification won them the job; they were 'losing a man a day — to nerves.'46:40Procore end to endMaritech runs everything from bid to substantial completion in Procore — daily logs, photos, live updates for clients as the transparency value in practice. Phil: 'it's really changed the game for me.' They tried a local New Glasgow alternative; Procore was the only complete package.51:00Wrap-up and sponsorsPhil's first-ever podcast; Jim heads to a Denver tilt-up convention with a Net Zero seminar booked. Outro ads for Cook Insurance and FCA Surety.
// THE INTRO

Dan sits down with Jim Allison (Director of Business Development) and Phil Farrow (Project Manager) of Maritech Construction, a Pictou County design-build GC founded by Phil's father Brian in 2010. After backstories — Jim's 11 years at RCS Construction and his A3 Electric days, Phil's hockey-to-labourer-to-PM path — the episode centres on Maritech's bet: becoming Atlantic Canada's first and best residential tilt-up concrete contractor. They detail a confidential 150-home single-storey seniors' subdivision in New Brunswick for a European developer, the economics (in-floor heat dropping energy bills from $300 to $75/month, costs below custom wood-frame), the training pipeline via an Ontario mentor, and out-sourcing design to Texas specialists Powers Brown Architecture and LJB Engineers who have 2,000 tilt-up designs of experience. Recorded days after Fiona, the climate-resilience angle lands hard: hurricane-, flood- and wildfire-resistant concrete homes, with a US supplier (Dayton Superior) telling them 'nobody in Atlantic Canada is doing this.' Side threads cover the Traction/EOS operating system (Jim is 'a believer in 70% of it'), their CATT core values and open-book transparency, avoiding public tenders for relationship-driven repeat work, Procore as their end-to-end platform, and Jim's Confederation Bridge light-fixture story where they 'lost a man a day to nerves.'

// THE LESSONS
See all 16 lessons ▸
Stake out a specific, defensible niche and own it regionally: Maritech's whole strategy is to be the first and most proficient tilt-up contractor in Atlantic Canada.
we want to be the the biggest the best the most proficient tilt-up contractor in Atlanta Canada
16:49
Position as the specialist sub to other GCs instead of competing with them — erect the tilt-up, then walk away, turning would-be competitors into customers.
anytime another GC is building a tilt up or wants to bid on a tilt up they'll use us as a sub
▶ Clip17:13
Buy the learning curve instead of living it: find a mentor firm to supervise your first projects and train your crew before you bet the company on a new method.
found maritech a mentor in Ontario and he's working with um with us
▶ Clip19:06
Source design from out-of-region specialists with deep repetition rather than forcing local firms through a learning curve — experience is cheaper than mistakes.
they're saving us money because they've made all the mistakes you know in 2000 designs
▶ Clip24:30
Don't start educating the market until your costing is nailed down — pitch with hard cost comparisons, not concepts.
we've got our costing down now like we know what the cost per square inch is now to do a residential tilt up
20:32
Trade shortages are a strategic opening: a method that eliminates wood framers and trusses wins precisely because nobody will bid small multi-res wood framing right now.
you can't find anyone to bid on small multi-res wood frame structures in the city
▶ Clip21:19
Climate resilience is becoming a sales channel, not just a spec: post-Fiona hurricanes, floods and wildfires are generating inbound demand for concrete homes.
he gets a call a day from California to like will you come out here and build me a tilt-up house
▶ Clip28:55
Radical transparency — including showing clients your margin — is a durable trust advantage in relationship-driven contracting.
it's not a crime to make money we show them the money we're making
▶ Clip42:49
Public tenders are a margin trap for small design-build GCs: extra paperwork, 15-20 competitors, and the lowest miss wins — repeat relationship work is more feasible.
it's extra work you know it's extra paperwork it's that's more time consuming it's it's it's a battle
41:38
Adopt management operating systems selectively: roughly 70% of Traction/EOS (weekly leadership meetings, rocks, accountabilities, core values) transfers to a construction firm — take that and skip the rest.
I'm a Believer in traction I'm not a believer of the whole system
▶ Clip38:29
Certifications open doors competitors can't walk through: pursuing ISO certification is what won A3 Electric the Confederation Bridge lighting contract.
to work on the bridge they wanted you to be certified in ISO so that helped us
▶ Clip45:39
Productize the structure, customize the skin: build a hundred identical concrete houses while varying exteriors so no two look the same — repetition economics without cookie-cutter optics.
we literally can build uh a hundred of the same house and but no two houses will look the same
9:02
Residential quality control runs a couple of steps above commercial in tilt-up — short walls put every imperfection at eye level, so detail discipline must rise when you move markets.
a whole lot more attention to detail on the residential sites
▶ Clip9:59
Run the whole job — bid to substantial completion — on one integrated platform; daily logs and photos turn project management software into a client transparency tool.
from a project manager's point of view it's it's really changed the game for me
47:48
Quantify the operating-cost story for buyers: in-floor heat in a concrete envelope cuts a $300 monthly energy bill to about $75 — a number that sells itself to seniors.
paying 300 a month for energy costs well it's going to go down to 75 dollars
▶ Clip8:38
Hiring a veteran executive who has already scaled a comparable firm lets a small contractor import a decade of systems overnight — Jim transplanted his RCS playbook into Maritech.
it was easy for me to know what worked from where I came from
14:30
// CLIPS FROM THIS EPISODE
All 16 lessons from this episode, on one page.
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// FEATURED BUSINESSES
Maritech Construction Inc.

Amherst, Nova Scotia general contractor handling commercial and institutional construction across Atla…

Full dossier · 2 projects ▸
Powers Brown Architecture

Houston-based professional services firm practicing architecture, interior design, programming and urb…

Full dossier · 1 project ▸
rcs construction inc.

Atlantic Canadian general contractor and construction manager delivering commercial, retail, hospitali…

Full dossier · 5 projects ▸
// COMPANIES & ORGS ✓ verified
Maritech Construction Inc.Jim Allison (Jimmy Allison)Powers Brown ArchitectureLJB Inc.Dayton Superior Corporationrcs Construction Inc.
// PROJECTS NAMED
Confederation BridgeSobeys horse barn (Pictou County)New Brunswick 150-home tilt-up subdivisionHome Hardware store, New GlasgowPartners for Care (cancelled, COVID)
SOURCE: podscope · public episode data · 33zFYZ33Dts