World of Concrete opens doors at Las Vegas Convention Center | Las Vegas Review-Journal

2022-05-28 22:21:46 By : Mr. David Han

Organizers expect more people to attend this year’s show, which opened Tuesday, than were at last year’s event and that numbers of attendees will be closer to those seen at pre-pandemic events.

Tools as small as trowels and as large as concrete pump trucks are on display in Las Vegas as the annual World of Concrete trade show returns for the second time in seven months.

The construction trade show began Tuesday and runs through Thursday at the Las Vegas Convention Center. It also included educational sessions that began Monday.

Organizers expect attendance to exceed that of the 2021 show, held in June, and be closer to numbers seen at pre-pandemic events.

SpitzLift, a manufacturer of lightweight portable cranes, exhibited at last year’s show, according to Nicholette Spitsbergen, director of business relations.

She said the summer event was slow but noted the first day of this year’s World of Concrete was more promising.

“We were happily surprised,” Spitsbergen said. “The show has started out with the way it has been. It’s been steadily busy, so it’s been good for us.”

More than 60,000 contractors, managers and distributors in the concrete industry normally attend the annual show in January. The show’s organizers estimated on its website that about 1,000 exhibitors are taking part in this week’s show.

Last year, the show kicked off pandemic-era conventions when it was rescheduled to take place in June. It became the first large trade show to use the convention center’s new West Hall and underground people-mover system by the Boring Co.

This year’s event appears to be shaping up to outpace the 2021 version.

“Leading up to the event, there have been only a few small cancellations from participating manufacturers with very minimal impact,” Steven Pomerantz, senior marketing manager for organizer Informa Exhibitions, said in an email before the show’s opening. “Attendee registration is pacing at a rate of double that of the last event held in June and is on track with events traded prior to the pandemic, underscoring the mission-critical need industry connection.”

Organizers say they are following local health guidelines, including Nevada’s mask mandate in public spaces regardless of vaccination status. They have also reminded attendees and exhibitors that the rule applies to indoor spaces, including casinos, meeting spaces and hospitality venues.

The pandemic has not discouraged some new companies from attending. Australian boot brand Blundstone held its first exhibit at World of Concrete. The company makes rubber work and steel-toe boots, but its casual Chelsea boots are more popular in the U.S.

Work and safety sales manager Fernando Nazco said Blundstone chose this convention to break into the U.S. work and safety market.

“Everyone else in the world, it’s the opposite,” Nazco said. “But here, we’re known for our leisure products. It’s a good way to capitalize on the success of the leisure (boots) in the U.S.”

The show continues Wednesday morning with one of its major draws: Masonry Madness. The outdoor event features four masonry competitions with prizes that include cash, a Ford F-250 truck and a Kubota XL1140 utility vehicle.

The highlight of the competition, the Spec Mix Bricklayer 500, pits 23 teams of masons and their tenders against each other to build the best and largest 26-foot-long brick wall with the fewest errors. This year’s bricklayer event marks its 20th anniversary.

McKenna Ross is a corps member with Report for America, a national service program that places journalists into local newsrooms. Contact her at mross@reviewjournal.com. Follow @mckenna_ross_ on Twitter.

Cement masons, engineers and artisans at World of Concrete encouraged more women to consider the trades for their unique work and good wages.

“I wanted to lay a perfect wall,” said Cole Stamper, the newly minted champion of the Spec Mix Bricklayer 500 at the World of Concrete. “Straight, plumb level, straight and perfect — and that’s what it was.”

With World of Concrete and the SHOT Show conventions this week and NAB around the corner, the meetings industry assesses what the attendance outlook will be in 2022.

World of Concrete, the construction trade show that kicked off pandemic-era conventions in Las Vegas last summer, returns to the city next week.

The construction trade show that marked the return of conventions to Las Vegas when its reschedued event was staged in June confirmed plans for Jan. 18-20.

Nevada added more than 10,000 jobs last month as coronavirus restrictions loosened and tourism regained its footing in Las Vegas, though unemployment remains high.

David Chavez was crowned the world’s best bricklayer for the second time at the World of Concrete’s Spec Mix Bricklayer 500 competition on Wednesday.

World of Concrete became the first major trade show to open in the U.S. when the doors opened at the Las Vegas Convention Center’s new $1 billion West Hall expansion Tuesday.

Conventioneers attending the World of Concrete trade show on Monday were the first customers to use the $52.5 million underground transit system developed by Elon Musk.

Organizers of the show dedicated to the concrete and masonry industries also will be the first to use the Las Vegas Convention Center’s new $1 billion West Hall.

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