State Masonry Contest Gives Phoenix High Students A Path To Nationals

Phoenix High School students in Oregon recently competed in a state masonry contest, aiming to earn a spot at a national-level competition. Events like this put young craftworkers under the same kinds of pressures they will face in the field: working to a standard, managing time, and delivering clean, consistent work.

Even when the work is done on a contest floor instead of a scaffold, the fundamentals are the same. Masonry is judged by what you can see and measure, including straight, plumb lines, consistent head joints and bed joints, proper bond, and tight corners. It is also judged by what is harder to spot at a glance, including how well someone reads layout, holds tolerances, and corrects small issues before they turn into rework.

For contractors watching the workforce pipeline, student competitions are more than a feel-good story. They highlight where training is happening, and they show which schools are investing time in craft-based construction programs. That matters in a trade where production, safety, and long-term quality depend on people who understand the basics of mortar, unit handling, and workmanship from day one.

As more schools and industry partners look for ways to connect classroom learning with careers, masonry contests offer a straightforward model. Set a clear standard, teach the fundamentals, and let students prove what they can build.

Read the full, original article from KDRV here.

Bonding with Masonry 2026: Q2
June 2026

This issue’s questions come from a Mason Contractor and an Engineer. What questions do you have? Send them to info@masonrymagazine.com, attention Technical Talk.

The Thirty-Year Mason: Ergonomics as a Retention Strategy
June 2026

In most industry circles, the conversation around the labor shortage follows a predictable script: How do we find the next generation of masons? While recruitment is vital, we often overlook the most valuable asset already on the job site: the experienced

Acme Brick Company Releases 2026 Pocket Guide to Brick Construction
June 2026

For more than four decades, all the basics of building with brick have come in a guide small enough to fit into a pocket. Acme Brick has just released a 2026 version of its Pocket Guide to Brick Construction. And yes, it’s still printed on paper just like

Masonry in the Media: Casa Azul, Chapultepec Castle, & More
June 2026

A film’s settings can take viewers to new locations, all from the comfort of their own home. It immerses them in the scenes, whether they take place in an opera house in Brazil or a grand mansion in Mexico City. Explore how these Latin American masonry ma