Acme Brick Company reopens Bennett, Texas plant

Words: Ron TaylorAcme Brick Co. hosted a ceremony Feb. 5 at Acme’s Bennett, Texas plant observing the first load of brick produced by the company’s newly reopened Bennett location.

This plant, just west of Dallas/Fort Worth and built in 1996, is located on the site of Acme’s first brick-making facility that began producing hard-fired brick in April, 1891. Acme is also reopening a portion of the company’s Texas Clay plant located in Malakoff near Athens, Texas.

Dennis Knautz, Acme president and CEO said, “It’s very exciting and to see this brick plant back in the business of making quality brick for our region’s homes. In December 2006, annual construction activity in the DFW area peaked at 182 million square feet. We then witnessed plummet by nearly 70 percent, to a low of only 57 million square feet by the start of 2011. Over the course of the past year, we have seen a rebirth of activity here in the Metroplex with construction now totaling 83 million square feet and forecasted to rise by double digits in 2013.

"Nearly the same story can be told about our Texas Clay plant in Malakoff," he continues. "The year 2012 witnessed greater order demand for that plant's brick products. In response, we restarted that plant's third kiln in late-December with the plan to bring Texas Clay to full capacity as quickly as possible.

“I believe that we can finally say with confidence that our local homebuilding market is coming back.” - Dennis Knautz"It is also important to note that during the "down time," we consciously retained a select group of key associates on the payroll who were assigned to a variety of projects - mostly at other Acme facilities - requiring them to travel and spend much time away from their families. While this group welcomes the end of travel and the return to working locally, they will work with and help train about 60 new associates who will be joining the company."

At full production, the Bennett plant is capable of producing over 2 million residential brick per week or roughly enough brick for 150 average sized homes.
About: Featured
National Masonry Associations Arrive to Help Salvage Historic Chimneys For Palisades Fire Memorial
May 2025

Los Angeles, CA – Beginning in the final week of May, an assembly of masonry teams will arrive in the Pacific Palisades to help salvage the historically-significant chimneys identified through House Museum’s disaster recovery initiative, Project Chimney.

The Cost of a Job: An Ever-Moving Target
May 2025

I look at a well-functioning estimating department and think, as I imagine most do, of the age-old question: "What came first – the chicken or the egg?" How do you know how much it costs to do a job before you do it? The truth is that pricing a job is an

MASONRY STRONG Podcast, Episode 21 Recap: Justin Meyer, VP of Sales - The Quikrete Companies
May 2025

For this episode of the MASONRY STRONG Podcast, Justin Meyer joins the MCAA in Indianapolis to talk about where his love for the industry started and what it's like attending the CMHA meetings.

The Evolution and Innovation of Concrete Unit Pavers
May 2025

When concrete unit pavers were first produced in Europe after the second World War, they were used as a replacement for clay brick pavers due to a lack of raw materials needed to produce that product. The primary emphasis was function with little to no co