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David Murray leads Fiesta Tent from horse stalls to innovative structures

News | June 1, 2018 | By:

Photo by Riccardo Cellere.

Running a business is hard work. There’s always a time when you’ve got to change the way you’re doing things,” says David Murray, founder and president of Fiesta Tents Ltd., Saint-Laurent, Quebec, Canada. “Every year you have to review your business—you have to review and correct.”

The inspiration for starting a business came in 1976 while Murray was working with horses at the city park adjacent to the Olympic Stadium during the Olympic Summer Games in Montreal. “When I arrived at the park I saw these two beautiful brand-new white 60-by-150-foot tents. Each one accommodated about 60 box stalls for the Olympic athletes’ horses,” he says. “I had never been beneath a tent that big before. They’re not that big by today’s standards, but back then it was impressive.”

At that time, Murray’s career goals varied from becoming a pilot for the Canadian Armed Forces or commercial airlines to being a professional hockey player. And while he did earn his pilot’s license (he still flies often and plays approximately 100 hockey games a year), it was tenting that captured his professional ambition.

If you build it …

The year following the Olympic Summer Games in Montreal, Murray floated his idea for a business erecting tented box stalls to local ranchers and people involved in the horse show circuit—and the responses were overwhelmingly enthusiastic. “I told them what I had seen at the Olympic Stadium and asked them: If I bought a tent and built some stalls so you could house 60 more horses than you’re able to now, would you be interested?” Murray says. “They said: Absolutely!”

One of those ranchers was so impressed with the idea that he loaned Murray $10,000 to get his idea off the ground. Murray added the investment to what funds he already had—$500. So with a grand total of $10,500, he purchased a 60-by-180-foot used pole tent, organized some friends to help him build 60 box stalls, and launched Portable Stalling Inc. (the company that would eventually become Fiesta Tents). “Because of our tents, these little horse shows became bigger and were able to hold 120 horses overnight instead of 60,” he says. “We picked up four or five shows that first year.”

Over the next 10 years, Murray grew the business 50 percent each year, with shows in Montreal, Ottawa, Quebec City and Toronto. He purchased 10 new 60-by-200-foot pole tents and had more than 800 box stalls in inventory. “A bunch of my hockey player and football friends helped me those first years,” he says. “We ate sandwiches, drank beer and slept in a trailer we pulled.”

The perfect R&D

In the mid-1980s, Murray began buying small party tents, expanded into the event market and eventually rebranded the company Fiesta Tents. After buying a couple of clearspan structures for the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, he decided it was time to venture into the design and manufacturing side of the tenting industry. “I felt it was time to build our own line of structures,” Murray says. “I had a great staff and hired more. It gave me time to hand over the day-to-day side of the rental business and devote myself to R&D and design.”

He began by designing structures for the company’s use, after which he collected comments and feedback from the installation crew. “I call it the perfect R&D,” Murray says. “The rental team would give me their thoughts such as ‘This takes too long to set up.’ Or ‘The connection needs work.’ We used that information to work out the bugs and develop a product line—and started selling it in 1992.”

The Fiesta Tents team continues to innovate with new designs, including an ongoing project for what Murray believes will be one of the biggest outdoor performance stages in the world. “Innovation design is really a big thing for us,” Murray says. “We’ll do almost any ‘impossible’ design request that comes to us.”

By Sigrid Tornquist, InTents editor and regular contributor to Specialty Fabrics Review.

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