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Byrne Dairy adds warehouse space at former New Venture Gear plant in DeWitt
DeWITT — Byrne Dairy Inc. is increasing its dry storage and warehousing capacity at the former Magna Powertrain/New Venture Gear plant in the town of DeWitt. The company’s space now totals 100,000 square feet, up from 60,000 square feet of space. The OX Group LLC, through its subsidiary ONX1 LLC, on Oct. 19 announced that […]
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DeWITT — Byrne Dairy Inc. is increasing its dry storage and warehousing capacity at the former Magna Powertrain/New Venture Gear plant in the town of DeWitt.
The company’s space now totals 100,000 square feet, up from 60,000 square feet of space.
The OX Group LLC, through its subsidiary ONX1 LLC, on Oct. 19 announced that it modified its leasing agreement with Byrne Dairy to increase the space. ONX1 manages and operates the former manufacturing and parts-distribution facility.
The additional space will accommodate Byrne Dairy’s increased dairy-food production at its ultra-pasteurization processing plant located near the New Venture Gear Drive location, the OX Group said.
OX Group now refers to the facility as the NVG Industrial Campus, says Robert Trafford, managing partner of ONX1 LLC. He spoke to CNYBJ from Huntsville, Alabama on Oct. 31.
The expansion requires Byrne Dairy to relocate to another section of the facility to accommodate the additional square footage, OX Group said.
Byrne Dairy is moving from the structure’s southeast corner into the northwest section of the building, according to Trafford.
“We expect them to be in their space by Thanksgiving,” he adds.
Byrne Dairy’s move also “better locates them” for OX Group to work with the company for any future expansion purposes with more loading docks available.
“As we anticipate an increase in our production and distribution operations, this expansion will allow us to plan for future growth in New York State while remaining cost competitive in the dairy food market. We value our relationship with the team at ONX1 and appreciate the opportunities they are providing,” Dan Wood, VP of operations at Byrne Dairy, said in the OX Group release.
Byrne Dairy is currently one of six tenants with operations in the NVG Industrial Campus.
The other tenants include Orlando, Florida–based CHEP, which manufactures pallets and containers; Custom Assembly, a manufacturing assembly group for off-road, sport-utility vehicles; and Rome–based Birnie Bus Service, which is using about 10,000 square feet of space, according to Trafford.
“Byrne Dairy was the first one in the door [in February 2014] at 60,000 square feet and we’ve just transitioned them over to a 100,000-square-foot space … We kept the same economic terms,” says Trafford.
With the current six tenants, the NVG Industrial Campus is “roughly 20 percent occupied” and still has about 1.2 million square feet available for use.
Trafford says that occupancy rate should increase soon.
“We’re actively in negotiations with some deals that … should dramatically enhance that [occupancy-percentage] number over the next three or four months,” he says.
Federal Express also has operations on the east side of the NVG Industrial Campus, but it’s not a building tenant, says Trafford.
He had subdivided and sold what was formerly the property’s east parking lot to a Federal Express developer.
The company built a 157,000-square-foot building in that location, he adds.
OX Group ownership
ONX1 purchased the 1.7 million-square-foot New Venture Gear plant from Syracuse Properties in the fall of 2012.
At the time of the purchase, Magna International occupied the plant. Magna in 2004 had purchased the business from New Process Gear, a Chrysler Corporation-owned company, according to the OX Group news release.
OX Group is a Florida–based real-estate development and management company specializing in the “restoration and repurposing of high quality, high profile” facilities formerly used for industrial purposes.
OX Group has multiple sites across the country, including subsidiaries, ONX1 and ONX3, which owns and operates the NVG Industrial Campus in DeWitt and the Silver City Industrial Park located in Sherrill.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com

Kohilo Wind buys former Welch Allyn building
SKANEATELES FALLS — The 159,247-square-foot former Welch Allyn building, situated on about 59 acres and located at 4619 Jordan Road in Skaneateles Falls, was recently sold. Kohilo Wind LLC purchased the property in August, according to a news release from Cushman Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company, which helped the arrange the sale. Michael Kalet and George W.
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SKANEATELES FALLS — The 159,247-square-foot former Welch Allyn building, situated on about 59 acres and located at 4619 Jordan Road in Skaneateles Falls, was recently sold.
Kohilo Wind LLC purchased the property in August, according to a news release from Cushman Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company, which helped the arrange the sale.
Michael Kalet and George W. Lee of Cushman Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage exclusively marketed and facilitated the sale of the property on behalf of the seller.
The purchase price and other financial details of the sale were not provided.
Kohilo Wind (https://kohilowind.com) is a manufacturer of non-traditional wind turbines that require less than 3 miles per hour of wind velocity to operate. The company says its turbines are “unique” in that they condition the wind through a diffuser system not used in traditional turbines. That harnesses the energy more efficiently and increases power production, even at low wind speeds, it says.
The company sells turbines for rooftops, grain silos, gazebos, towers, ballasts, mobile wind trailers, lighting poles, boats, RVs, ATVs, golf carts, and new handheld wind-powered cell-phone chargers, according to its Facebook page.
Contact The Business Journal News Network at news@cnybj.com
Pyramid Brokerage announces a pair of Watertown transactions
WATERTOWN — Cushman Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company recently announced the closing of two real-estate transactions in Watertown that it helped to arrange. Stony Pyle 3, Inc. purchased the 16,328-square-foot, former FedEx terminal located on 2.9 acres at 22987 Route 51 in Watertown. Bradley Street LLC sold the property for $600,000. Christopher Clark from Cushman Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage
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WATERTOWN — Cushman Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company recently announced the closing of two real-estate transactions in Watertown that it helped to arrange.
Stony Pyle 3, Inc. purchased the 16,328-square-foot, former FedEx terminal located on 2.9 acres at 22987 Route 51 in Watertown. Bradley Street LLC sold the property for $600,000. Christopher Clark from Cushman Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage exclusively marketed the property and represented the seller in this sale transaction.
Also, Butler Fence sold the 5,785-square-foot industrial flex property situated on 4.88 acres at 27001 Route 37 in Watertown to Troy Fleming for $210,000. Clark also exclusively marketed this property and represented the seller in the transaction.
Contact The Business Journal News Network at news@cnybj.com

Utica Zoo to use state funding for renovations required for accreditation
UTICA — The Utica Zoo will use a state grant of $100,000 for renovations it needs for accreditation with the Silver Spring, Maryland–based Association of Zoos and Aquariums. The zoo needs to renovate its primate building and housing for animals that are taken off the premises for educational purposes, New York State Senator Joseph Griffo
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UTICA — The Utica Zoo will use a state grant of $100,000 for renovations it needs for accreditation with the Silver Spring, Maryland–based Association of Zoos and Aquariums.
The zoo needs to renovate its primate building and housing for animals that are taken off the premises for educational purposes, New York State Senator Joseph Griffo (R–Rome) said in a news release issued on Oct. 31.
Griffo secured the state funding for the Utica Zoo, his office said.
The Utica Zoo has been working toward accreditation since 2011, which will offer “better opportunities” for future funding grants, according to the release.
The accreditation will also provide the Utica Zoo with “guidance on best practices for protocols and procedures; enhance” staff recruitment and retention of employees who want to work for an accredited zoo; and allow the Utica Zoo to share in loaning animals from other zoos.
“I am pleased to have secured this funding so that the Utica Zoo can expand this important educational experience for our community and improve the Primate Building, while bringing the zoo one step closer to the esteemed accreditation it deserves,” Griffo said.
Griffo understands the “value” the Utica Zoo brings to our region, Andria Heath, executive director of the Utica Zoo, contended in the release.
“The zoo has a robust presence, recruits staff from here at home and throughout the nation, and contributes to our local economy as a tourist destination. The support that is provided to the zoo is intended to serve as a catalyst to multiply everything we have to offer, and we look forward to much continued success,” she said.
Primate building
The zoo will use $50,000 for improvements on the primate building, which houses spider monkeys, white-handed gibbons, golden lion tamarins, and tegu.
The facility also currently uses the building as winter homes for several animals that are “not able to withstand the harsh” Central New York winters, including striped hyena, ring-tailed lemurs, and Chinese alligators.
The renovation work will help make the exhibits “more natural, more visually appealing and more consistent with modern zoological practices,” the Utica Zoo said, noting that the primate building is nearly 90 years old.
Education Center
The Utica Zoo will use the remaining $50,000 to renovate the Sinnott wing of the facility’s Education Center, which is currently housing its education animals.
These animals are typically brought to places like local nursing homes and libraries, where people who may not be able to visit the zoo “can still familiarize themselves with wildlife,” Griffo’s office said.
The building is “barely large enough” to house the current education animals, which include several snakes and reptiles, a tarantula, a North American porcupine, and birds of prey like the barred owl and red-tailed hawk.
By improving the building, the Utica Zoo will then be able to expand its current collection to include more animals for people to meet and learn about, like an armadillo and a sloth.
The Utica Zoo contends a “wider variety” of animals available for outside visits will “encourage more groups to take advantage of the opportunity,” according to Griffo’s release.
The Utica Zoo also occasionally accepts local animals that have been “rehabilitated,” so “they can be showcased through the education program.”
By creating more housing space, the Utica Zoo won’t have to turn away these rehabilitated animals, some of which need a “more seasonal outside climate.”
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com

SUNY Cortland’s DeGroat Hall formally reopens after $7 million renovation
CORTLAND — SUNY Cortland announced that a completely renovated DeGroat Hall opened its doors with 146 beds for students this fall after a $7 million update. It was the first major overhaul for SUNY Cortland’s four-story, brick Georgian-style residential facility since it was built 65 years ago, the university said in a news release posted
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CORTLAND — SUNY Cortland announced that a completely renovated DeGroat Hall opened its doors with 146 beds for students this fall after a $7 million update.
It was the first major overhaul for SUNY Cortland’s four-story, brick Georgian-style residential facility since it was built 65 years ago, the university said in a news release posted on its website.
The renovation modernizes DeGroat Hall — named after Harry De Witt DeGroat, the Cortland Normal School’s third principal —while “maintaining distinct touches from the past.”
“From new floors and energy efficient lighting and heaters to bath, bed and laundry room upgrades, this work exemplifies the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York’s commitment to providing quality living environments for SUNY students,” Gerrard P. Bushell, president and CEO of the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York, contended in the release.
Members of the SUNY Cortland campus community marked the completion of the major renovations with a grand-reopening ceremony and open house on Oct. 13.
The student residence was one of three companion buildings that were designed by Cortland architect Carl W. Clark and constructed in 1951 on Graham Avenue during the administration of president Donnal V. Smith, who served from 1943 to 1959.
DeGroat served from 1912 to 1943. During his tenure, he instituted many school traditions including its alma mater, the release stated.
The renovation
In December 2015, following the fall semester’s end, students moved out of DeGroat Hall and an “accelerated schedule of construction began,” according to Rob Shutts, SUNY Cortland’s director of facilities planning, design, and construction. Fahs Construction, of Binghamton, was the general contractor on the project and King + King Architects, of Syracuse, designed the revamped student residence. The goal was to open the building to house students for the fall 2016 semester, SUNY Cortland said, and it was met one month early.
“DeGroat had not received any appreciable improvement before the renovation,” Shutts said in the release. “It was one of the last residence halls to be updated as part of the campus master plan.”
With the completion of the partially renovated Casey and Smith Halls complex at the base of Neubig Road in the near future, every single dormitory-style residence on campus will have received major renovations in recent years, the college said.
DeGroat Hall has a new service elevator attached externally by glass corridors to the south side of the building. The improvement makes the second and third floors available to residents and guests with disabilities, in compliance with federal regulations of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
The contractor added kitchens to all of the DeGroat Hall lounges. Previously, it had been the only residence hall that had lacked them, according to the release.
The third-floor lounges contain features like padded window seats where students can “relax and read.” Throughout the building are modernized Georgian features that the original DeGroat Hall never had, including large decorative ceiling medallions, crown molding and wainscoting constructed to look like painted, hand-carved wood, the college said. The flooring is made of porcelain tile that “imitates white and silver marble, saving both on fiscal and natural resources.”
As with all other student residence halls renovated since 2005, DeGroat Hall contains many features that contribute to the campus goal of sustainability, such as energy efficient lighting, exterior-building envelope enhancements, and “numerous sustainable construction and design elements,” the release stated. The reconstruction project used wood from sustainable forests, low-volatile organic chemical (VOC) products, and materials containing recycled content.
Contact The Business Journal News Network at news@cnybj.com

State finishes $8 million bridge replacement on I-81 in Tully
TULLY — New York Governor Andrew M. Cuomo on Oct. 27 announced the completion of an $8 million project to replace the northbound and southbound bridges carrying Interstate 81 over Route 80 in the town of Tully in Onondaga County. The separate northbound and southbound bridges were completely replaced. Both bridges are now wider, and
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TULLY — New York Governor Andrew M. Cuomo on Oct. 27 announced the completion of an $8 million project to replace the northbound and southbound bridges carrying Interstate 81 over Route 80 in the town of Tully in Onondaga County.
The separate northbound and southbound bridges were completely replaced. Both bridges are now wider, and have two 12-foot lanes, a 6-foot left shoulder, and a 10-foot right shoulder. Pre-cast concrete panels were used to speed construction, the governor’s office said in a news release. Workers also made minor upgrades to Route 80, including construction of sidewalks in each direction.
A temporary bridge was built in the median to carry traffic during construction, to minimize travel impacts, the release stated. Work began last fall.
Remaining work on the project includes removal of that temporary bridge, its substructure, and the median crossovers, as well as minor road shoulder reconstruction and site cleanup, according to the release. The state said it expects all work to be completed by the end of November.
“This project will strengthen a vital part of Central New York’s transportation network and will help ensure this remains a safe and dependable roadway for years to come,” Cuomo contended in the release. “We will continue making smart investments in our infrastructure that will support economic growth and create a stronger New York for all.”
New York State Department of Transportation Commissioner Matthew J. Driscoll added, “This bridge replacement project restores a vital north-south link on the I-81 corridor, which supports commuter, recreational and commercial traffic.”
The construction contractor for the design-build project was Crane-Hogan Structural Systems, Inc. a Spencerport, New York–based general construction firm that has a branch office in Syracuse.
Crane-Hogan was founded in 1975 by Daniel C. Hogan and James R. Crane, according to its website. The firm said it “has grown steadily over the past 35 years, completing over 700 projects” totaling more than $8 billion in value. Crane-Hogan works mainly in Central and Western New York.
Crane-Hogan’s client list, posted on its site, includes many government organizations, such as the New York State Department of Transportation, Thruway Authority, Power Authority, and the cities of Binghamton, Elmira, Ithaca, Syracuse, and Utica. The construction firm’s private clients have included Cornell University, M&T Bank, and United Health Services.
Contact Rombel at arombel@cnybj.com

Northern Eagle Beverages brews growth strategy
The Eagle has landed — Neil Armstrong ONEONTA — On July 20, 1969 at 4:18 p.m., astronaut Neil Armstrong told NASA’s Mission Control in Houston that the Lunar Lander he piloted had landed safely on the moon. The words meant mission accomplished. Glens Falls Brewing CompanyNorthern Eagle Beverages, Inc. (Northern Eagle) hasn’t accomplished its mission
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The Eagle has landed — Neil Armstrong
ONEONTA — On July 20, 1969 at 4:18 p.m., astronaut Neil Armstrong told NASA’s Mission Control in Houston that the Lunar Lander he piloted had landed safely on the moon. The words meant mission accomplished.
Glens Falls Brewing Company
Northern Eagle Beverages, Inc. (Northern Eagle) hasn’t accomplished its mission yet, but it is definitely on its scheduled flight path to vertically integrate the company. The distributor of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages in Chenango, Otsego, and Delaware counties plans to close its second corporate acquisition in the second week of November. “Northern Eagle is purchasing a 75 percent interest in Glens Falls Brewing Co., LLC, the brewing operation of Davidson Brewing Co. located in Queensbury, New York,” says George Allen, president of Northern Eagle.
Tri-it Distributing of Lancaster, New York, parent company of Saratoga Eagle, and John and Mike Munter of Munter Enterprises in Middle Grove, New York hold 25 percent of the stock between them. Tri-it and Saratoga Eagle are distributors for both Anheuser-Busch and Cooperstown Brewing. Tribals, LLC is the property-holding company and has the same ownership control as reflected in Glens Falls Brewing Company.
“The asset sale does not include the Davidson brothers’ brewery and restaurant launched 20 years ago in downtown Glens Falls or the Davidson Brothers beer brand. Rick Davidson has agreed to manage the Queensbury operation following the transfer of ownership,” Allen says.
He continues, “Our plan is to invest $1.5 million to expand the facility by adding lager tanks, canning equipment, and other machinery in order to produce more craft beverages. The renovations will also include a tasting room and retail outlet. The location on Route 9 is just a mile from the Six-Flags Great Escape, which draws thousands of people daily past our doors … We’ve had a good relationship with the brothers since they began producing our beer in 2014 under the Cooperstown label.”
Details of the deal were not disclosed, but Northern Beverage assumed the balance of a 20-year mortgage held by the Glens Falls National Bank & Trust Company. Northern Eagle received a 10-year payment-in-lieu-of-taxes (PILOT) from the Warren and Washington County Industrial Development Agency.
“The assets of the Davidson acquisition include a 22,000-square-foot manufacturing plant sited on 4.8 acres,” notes Allen. “The improvements to the plant will boost its current production capacity from 15,000 barrels to 25,000 barrels. In addition to brewing and packaging Cooperstown brands, the Queensbury brewery will also be a contract manufacturer to small, craft breweries which can’t afford the brewing equipment or packaging line; act as a collaborative resource for these small brewers; and serve as a retail outlet. The minimum order is only 660 cases, and a small brewer, with very little risk, could work with us at a reasonable price. Northern Eagle can also help them navigate the distribution channels available to their products … The plant is currently staffed with five full-time and three part-time employees. We’re projecting annual sales from the facility of approximately $3.5 million.”
Northern Eagle Beverages
Northern Eagle’s latest acquisition comes just four months after the company moved into a new, 68,000-square-foot warehouse and office facility located at 41 Browne St. in the town of Oneonta. The property is situated between UPS and Ioxus. Eastman Associates, Inc. of Oneonta was the general contractor on the project. “The offices comprise 6,500 feet, and 46,000 square feet of the warehouse are refrigerated,” notes Allen. “We bought the plot in August 2013, and in 2014 the Otsego County Industrial Development Agency approved a PILOT for the $7 million project. The 14.6 acre site cost Northern Eagle, LLC, the operating company’s real-estate arm, $200,000 with the remaining $6.8 million allocated to site-preparation, soft costs, and construction. The operating company employs 42, serves 390 accounts, and generates $13 million a year in sales.”
The new warehouse is just phase one of expanding the company’s warehousing capacity and improving operational efficiency. “We plan to add another 14,000 feet here at the Browne St. site,” avers the company president. “The expansion, which is scheduled to be completed toward the end of 2018, will also include a tasting room and retail outlet for our Cooperstown brands and for New York state products, such as wine, cheese, and syrup. Our plan calls for using some of the additional space for research and development … Northern Eagle continues to operate its original 42,000-square-foot facility containing 4,000 feet of cold storage at 7 Railroad Ave. in Oneonta, where it processes, dries, ‘pelletizes,’ and packages farmers’ hops for brewing its own Cooperstown beers and for sale to other breweries. Most of the pelletizing is done for farms within a 50-mile radius of Oneonta. The Railroad Street plant also has packaging equipment. In addition to its role as a beverage distributor, packager, pelletizer, and brewer, Northern Eagle is the U.S. hops importer for Hopfen in Spalt, Germany. We are currently selling these hops to 30 craft breweries.” Next door to the Railroad Street plant, Northern Eagle also runs a redemption center for bottles and cans.
Cooperstown Brewing Company
Northern Eagle’s first acquisition came in April 2014 when the company took title to the Cooperstown Brewing Company, located six miles south of Cooperstown in Milford. Northern Eagle was the first distributor in the country to own 100 percent of a domestic brewery. The Cooperstown brewery, started in 1995 by Stan Hall, had closed prior to the negotiations. “The deal was an asset sale,” states Allen. “We bought the building, which has about 3,000 square feet set on 2 acres, some equipment, and the recipes. From my perspective, the most important asset was the name, which has not only national but also international recognition. We’ve built our brands on the basis of this instant recognition with labels such as Old Slugger Ale, Nine Man Ale, Benchwarmer, Bases Loaded, Strike Out, and our latest — Bambino. The Milford location is on the Cooperstown Beverage Trail, which attracts thousands of visitors yearly, and the Cooperstown Brewing Co. is the stop next to Brewery Ommegang, which by itself is a huge draw.”
Cooperstown Brewing Co. is open nine months a year and employs two people full-time and another four part-time. It generates annual sales of about $500,000.
That’s why Northern Eagle invested between $150,000 and $200,000 to create a tasting room and gift shop as an outlet for its products. The Cooperstown Brewery Co. already is licensed in New York State as a microbrewery and is applying for a Farm Brewers license. “This allows Cooperstown Brewery to manufacture up to 75,000 barrels a year; sell our products to wholesalers and retailers and sell to out-of-state entities if the buyer’s state allows it; set up tasting rooms for New York State labeled beverages; sell our products at farmers’ markets, county fairs, and the State Fair; and hold tastings at charitable events and licensed grocery stores,” explains Allen. “The Farm Brewery license also allows us to sell our beverages by the bottle for off-premises consumption at a number of venues and sell by the glass on our premises, which can include five locations. Our plans also include creating an online store for home brewers to buy hops.”
Hager Hops Farm
The catalyst and financier behind Northern Beverage’s strategic plan to create a vertically integrated company is Louis B. Hager, a great-great grandson of the Busch family that founded the Anheuser-Busch brewery. He is the chairman of the board of Northern Eagle and the major stockholder. Allen is a minority stockholder. Hager’s ancestors immigrated to Cooperstown more than a century ago — in order to grow hops. He worked for the Anheuser-Busch Corp. from 1980 to 1986, when he bought LaMonica Beverages located in Oneonta. Hager chose the name Northern Eagle Beverages, because the eagle was on the Anheuser-Busch logo.
Northern Eagle focused on distributing beverages within its three-county franchise from 1986 until 2011. “Lou was concerned about the limits to our growth as a distributor,” recalls Allen, “since we serve an area with only 170,000 residents and a static population. He recognized that consolidation of the industry limited our options to grow through acquiring other distributors and saw the potential of expanding into the brewing business. Lou also owns a 1,000 acre farm outside Cooperstown, and in 2013, he prepared 11 acres to grow hops. That November, Northern Eagle bought the pelletizing machine, and in May of 2014, the Hager family purchased 11,000 hops plants (seven varieties) from Pacific Coast nurseries. This year, the family harvested 3,500 pounds of hops and plans to add another 14 acres to meet the growing demand. Currently, most of the harvested hops are sold to brewers within a 50-mile radius, but the farm has also shipped product to Pennsylvania and Vermont.”
Business strategy
In just a few short years, the Oneonta enterprise has morphed from its role as a beverage distributor to also being a brewer of beer and soft drinks, a contract manufacturer, a grower and importer of hops, and a bottle/can redemption center. “I think the public’s taste for craft beers will continue to grow,” intones Allen, “which offers us an opportunity to capitalize on the trend. While our distribution business is not forecast to grow very much, it provides a steady cash flow to help finance our investments in other revenue streams as we vertically integrate the company. I like to call our strategy ‘dirt to lips.’
The business strategy also utilizes long-tail marketing. “We recognize that a small group of popular items dominate our sales,” notes Allen, “but we also understand that our inventory includes items that continue to sell without special promotions. No single item in this group stands out, but collectively the sales can be impressive and the margins are often better than the fast-selling items. Our new warehouse allows us to carry a greater variety of inventory to reach more customers and generate more total sales and higher profits. The key is our ability to manage a large number of customer segments and to update our inventory in response to changing demand. The investment we have made in inventory control and logistics is already showing a return.”
Industry trends
The overall U.S. beer market, the second largest in the world, was valued in 2015 by the Brewers Association research at $105.9 billion. While overall sales consumption rose a scant 0.2 percent, the sale of craft beer rose 12.8 percent, imported beer increased by 6.2 percent, and export craft beer jumped 16.3 percent. The craft-beer market now generates a 12.2 percent share of the total domestic market volume and 21 percent of the revenue. While beer preference is flat for the 50-plus age group and has fallen a few points in the 30-to-49 age group, Millennials are gravitating to import and craft beers. In 2012, the U.S. brewery count was 2,456. At the end of 2015, the number nearly doubled to 4,269, driven largely by regional-craft breweries, microbreweries, and brewpubs. The explosive growth of the craft-beer industry is now attracting investment from private-equity groups as well as strategic buyers.
In New York, the Stonebridge Research Group found that since the passage of the New York Farm Brewery legislation, which became law in January 2013, the number of craft breweries has more than doubled from 95 to 207 (January 2015). Just between 2011 and 2013, craft-beer production was up 54 percent. By the end of 2014, the craft-beer industry had a significant impact on the state economy — $3.5 billion, creating 6,552 direct jobs and another 4,814 jobs in related industries.
The big players in the beer industry have reacted to trends first by consolidating. In 2008, the Anheuser-Busch Companies approved a $52 billion all-cash takeover by Belgium–based InBev, creating the world’s largest beer maker with brands such as Budweiser, Bud Light, Stella Artois, and Beck’s. InBev itself was a product of a 2004 merger of Interbrew, headquartered in Belgium, and Brazilian brewer AmBev. InBev on Oct. 10 closed on its latest deal — a $108 billion takeover of SABMiller. The new combined company will control one-third of the global beer supply.
The major beer players have also employed a strategy to buy large craft-beer breweries. In 2011, InBev bought the Goose Island Beer Co., a deal which started the company’s buying spree of craft brands. In nine of the 15 states where it’s legal, InBev now owns 21 distributors nationwide that handle about 7 percent to 8 percent of the company’s sales volume.
The Brewers Association sees these moves by InBev as the greatest threat to the industry’s growth. In real estate, the mantra is location, location, location; in the brewing business, it’s shelf space. InBev is not only moving to control the production of beer but also its distribution. Independent brewers fear reduced access to the market because of InBev’s growing distribution muscle.
Allen’s past and future
Allen, 51, is an Oneonta native, who graduated from the State University of New York at Oneonta with a major in English and journalism. He joined Northern Eagle in 1988 as a junior sales rep, advanced to sales supervisor in 1998, assumed a position as manager in 2001, then VP of sales and operations in 2008, and president in 2012. He likes to quip that he has worked at every position in the company except for truck driver.
Northern Eagle Beverage’s president is busy piloting his own Lunar Lander as he navigates implementing the strategic business plan while simultaneously running operations. The flight plan, however, is clear: Continue to integrate the business vertically, look for opportunities to grow, and leverage the company’s strengths. “We have a great group of employees,” posits the company pilot. “I don’t have any ‘yes’ people, and they work well as a team. I know we can reach our goals. That’s why I get up every morning eager to go to work.”
Allen may not call Houston to say the eagle has landed, but he is determined to call Lou Hager and say “mission accomplished.”
Contact Poltenson at npoltenson@cnybj.com

Hopshire Farm & Brewery in Tompkins County is expanding
FREEVILLE — Hopshire Farm & Brewery in the village of Freeville in Tompkins County is implementing an expansion project that will add 2,500 square feet of space in two phases. The company is located at 1771 Dryden Road in Freeville, which is part of the town of Dryden. Hopshire Farm & Brewery opened in May 2013
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FREEVILLE — Hopshire Farm & Brewery in the village of Freeville in Tompkins County is implementing an expansion project that will add 2,500 square feet of space in two phases. The company is located at 1771 Dryden Road in Freeville, which is part of the town of Dryden.
Hopshire Farm & Brewery opened in May 2013 and is a family-owned business that Randy Lacey and Diane Gerhart operate, according to a news release issued Oct. 28.
Phase 1 of the project involves a 1,200-square-foot, 100-person community-event space to accommodate larger gatherings.
The business says it expects to complete the first phase at the beginning of 2017.
Plans for Phase 2 include a 1,300-square-foot addition that will expand the brewing and storage area, allowing the brewery to double production.
Hopshire Farm & Brewery is funding the expansion through a grant that Empire State Development awarded after it submitted a New York State consolidated-funding application (CFA).
Under the terms of the grant award, Hopshire Farm & Brewery will receive funding for 20 percent of the project cost once it meets “several” requirements, it said.

The conditions include completing the project. In addition, 30 percent of the contractors used during construction must be certified as a minority/women owned business enterprise (M/WBE).
Hopshire Farm & Brewery must also create two permanent jobs in the next three years, according to its release.
It’s one of only three local businesses in Tompkins County selected in 2016 for a grant from Empire State Development, the company said.
Hopshire’s owners decided an expansion would benefit the business, citing a “thriving customer base and an increasing demand for event space.”
The business produces craft beers that it serves in its tasting room and sells locally. Hopshire Farm & Brewery also contends that it has become a “popular gathering space,” hosting Friday night music, food and beer pairings, Wednesday yoga, fundraisers, and private events such as birthday and graduation parties.
The new event space will provide a venue for more of these kinds of activities, Hopshire says. Hopshire’s owners see the expansion as a “response to what their customers and the community want.”
By expanding, they hope to reach more of the community while continuing to promote a “family-friendly environment”; sponsor public events; and “encourage” community participation in the brewery through activities such as the production of its Cohoperation beer, which uses donated hops from local growers in the brewing process, according to the release.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com
Oneida County Sewer District begins 5-year project to upgrade aging Water Pollution Control Plant
UTICA — Oneida County announced it has started construction on a five-year schedule of major upgrades that will “transform the more than 60-year-old Water Pollution Control Plant on Leland Avenue in Utica into a more environmentally sustainable and technologically advanced facility.” The upgrades seek to help eliminate overflows into the Mohawk River, satisfy New York
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UTICA — Oneida County announced it has started construction on a five-year schedule of major upgrades that will “transform the more than 60-year-old Water Pollution Control Plant on Leland Avenue in Utica into a more environmentally sustainable and technologically advanced facility.”
The upgrades seek to help eliminate overflows into the Mohawk River, satisfy New York State Department of Environmental Conservation consent-order requirements, and help the City of Utica with treatment elements of its long-term control plan, according to a county news release.
Oneida County has received grants from NYSERDA and Empire State Development, as well as low-interest financing and principal forgiveness through the New York State Environmental Facilities Corporation to fund the project, currently estimated at $265 million, the release stated.
Planned construction work to be completed through 2021 includes:
“Oneida County is among the many municipalities throughout the nation that is addressing the need to upgrade aging infrastructure,” County Executive Anthony J. Picente, Jr. said in the release. “We have had the great benefit of a collaborative process, in which our Steering Committee has had input since 2007 on the studies and plan development that ensures the most efficient means of repairing and upgrading our system to meet our long-term needs.”
The county said heavy rains or snowmelts can cause stormwater to overwhelm the system and result in sewage overflows into the Mohawk River, as well as backups into basements.
The “answer to this is a three-part fix” that includes rerouting stormwater from the sanitary sewer system through private-property projects, rehabilitation and repair work across the sewer district, and upgrades at the Water Pollution Control Plant, according to the county.
The efforts to reduce sanitary sewer overflows into the Mohawk River began in 2007. In addition to the upgrades at the plant, more than 1,360 manholes and the equivalent of about 104 miles of sanitary sewer have been repaired through the Oneida County Sewer District’s Operation Ripple Effect program, the release stated.
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Civic Data Hackathon: Syracuse Roads Challenge winners are named
SYRACUSE — Syracuse Mayor Stephanie Miner on Oct. 27 announced the winners of the City’s Civic Data Hackathon: Syracuse Roads Challenge. The City had partnered with the Syracuse University School of Information Studies (iSchool) and Dallas, Texas–based AT&T (NYSE: T) to organize the Hackathon and to judge entries. The competition, which launched Sept. 26, attracted
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SYRACUSE — Syracuse Mayor Stephanie Miner on Oct. 27 announced the winners of the City’s Civic Data Hackathon: Syracuse Roads Challenge.
The City had partnered with the Syracuse University School of Information Studies (iSchool) and Dallas, Texas–based AT&T (NYSE: T) to organize the Hackathon and to judge entries.
The competition, which launched Sept. 26, attracted 13 entrants.
The program was designed to “engage” technologists, designers, developers, and anyone else interested in using “their skills for social good,” Miner’s office said in a news release.
It was also “one of the first times in the U.S.” that a municipality has led a Hackathon focused on road infrastructure.
The winners
Stephen Shaffer won the first-place prize of $2,500 for his project called Scout. It’s described as a chat platform for community data gathering through Facebook messenger. For the Syracuse Roads Challenge, Scout provides a “simple” method to collect pothole information and centrally store and visually display the results, according to Miner’s office.
The team of Reuben Pereira, Roman Temchenko, and Oleksandr Dzyuba won the second-place prize of $1,000 for a dashboard that visualizes the quality of streets and “prioritizes where repairs are most urgent based on road rating and number of potholes.”
The team of Ishani Jariwala, Pankaj Bathija, Soham Khare, Shrutik Katchhi, Manas Sikri, and Gauri Komawar won the third-place prize of $500 for a dashboard that includes “descriptive and predictive analyses of road data.”
“We’re pleased that we could partner with AT&T and the City of Syracuse to make this challenge happen, and we are glad that we had the opportunity to apply the concepts we teach our students here at the iSchool for the benefit of the community. I am thrilled that many of our students took part in the hackathon, and that our faculty took the time to serve as mentors to participating teams,” Elizabeth Liddy, dean of Syracuse University’s iSchool, said in Miner’s release.
Miner said the competition is an example of how cities can help foster innovation to solve the problems they face.
“This Hackathon was a great example of what could be accomplished with open data and I appreciate the hard work of all our partners and entrants,” Miner said. “This is the type of innovative thinking that will challenge the way cities tackle historic problems with creative new solutions.”
“The quality of the innovative solutions developed through this unique challenge demonstrates the vibrancy and talent of the Central New York’s technology, entrepreneurial and student communities,” Marissa Shorenstein, New York president of AT&T, added. “We applaud Mayor Miner and Syracuse University for embracing the benefits of technology and data, while having the foresight to utilize these remarkable tools for civic and social good.”
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com
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