"I've got five ornamental crews and six plaster crews working nearly 'round the clock," says Inmon, plastering superintendent at D.L. Henricksen Co. Inc., of Tacoma, Wash. "But this is the chance of a lifetime. It's fantastic to be working on this project."
Jim Inmon was fresh out of high school when he first worked on the Washington State Capitol Complex-shortly after the 1965 earthquake in the area. Two Capitol renovations, one earthquake and 39 years later, Inmon is back in Olympia, leading plasterers in the rehabilitation of the state's most significant and historic structure. Washington officials have high expectations for the 1928 legislative building and Inmon is eager to please.
"I've got five ornamental crews and six plaster crews working nearly 'round the clock," says Inmon, plastering superintendent at D.L. Henricksen Co. Inc., of Tacoma, Wash. "But this is the chance of a lifetime. It's fantastic to be working on this project."