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News & Features

Building a legacy, brick by brick

READER REACTION

by Heather B. Hayes
for Virginia Business
May 2006

It’s a new world for Old Virginia Brick. Since 1890, the Salem-based company has been one of the country’s leading makers of “wood-mould” brick. The bricks are prepared in wooden molds and then fired in modern kilns. “It gives you a unique look because every brick is slightly different,” says Chris Moore, vice president of sales and marketing. “It gives you an Old World look, because the bricks look as if they were made hundreds of years ago.”

Old Virginia Brick products can be found at 90 percent of the buildings constructed at the University of Virginia since World War II, including the new John Paul Jones Arena. Other customers over the years have included Yale University, Wake Forest University, the College of William & Mary and Disney World.

But the company has entered a new phase with its recent acquisition by Old Virginia Acquisition Group, a private Charlottesville-based investment group that also has holdings in banking, real estate development and building materials. Selling the company were CEO Fletcher Smoak, Moore, two other local investors and a Turkish company.

The 170-employee company was financially healthy and growing before the ownership change, but Smoak says that the new owners will enable Old Virginia Brick to make greater strides towards its goal of being known as the premier wood-mould brick manufacturer in the country. The initial focus will be on expanding the brick facilities in Salem and increasing output capacity from 42 million to 55 million bricks each year. “That’s a pretty substantial boost in production,” he says, noting that the industry as a whole produces 600 million bricks each year. “And we’ll move on that immediately.”

Old Virginia Brick had revenue of $20 million in 2005 and expects to top $23 million this year. It already is a major player in a very specialized niche. Only 12 companies in the country provide wood-mould bricks, most of them owned by large multinational corporations.

 

 

 


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