(Photo credit: fizkes)
With a production/sales presence dating back to 1925, Acme's Tulsa office serves the eastern half of Oklahoma which encompasses 25 counties. Its 3,200-square-foot showroom features the largest selection of hard-fired clay brick in this part of the state, focusing on regionally produced Acme Brick from Oklahoma, Colorado, Arkansas and Texas. With the popularity of brick and stone combinations, a full range of both man-made and natural stones are displayed for the customer's design convenience, as well as hundreds of tile, natural stone and hardwood floor choices. And coming soon: the outdoor fireplace feature will allow one's ""outdoor living imagination"" to truly design an outdoor kitchen like no other!
Acme Brick Company is one of only twenty-five companies nationwide that have received David Weekley Homes’ 2024 nationally acclaimed “Partners of Choice Award.”
In 1988, two physics professors began discussing the scientific components that might lead to better energy efficiency in building construction. Bo Adamson from Lund University in Sweden and Wolfgang Feist from the Institut für Wohnen und Umwelt in Germany had read the research, dating back to the 1970s, that suggested it was possible to construct a low-energy building that was designed to exploit passive solar technologies and establish a comfortable indoor temperature with a low-energy requirement for heating or cooling.
A funny thing happened on the way to the pandemic; people stayed home. Of course, the practical reason for this trend was to stay away from crowds, some of which were composed of people who were ill and didn’t even know it. However, many clouds of sad stories have silver linings!
Despite the fervent requests by companies for employees to “come back to the office,” for many, the genie that escaped from the bottle (or cubicle) during the COVID pandemic is not returning any time soon. Working from home (WFH) is still wildly popular.
One of the best-known buildings on The University of Texas at Austin campus, Gregory Gym, was built in 1930, making it almost 100 years old today. Its unique appearance is partially the result of the style and color of its brick, made by a young company located 200 miles north of Austin, near Fort Worth, called Acme Brick.
The story of Gregory Gym became part of the folklore of the Texas Longhorns.