Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.
Excellus agrees to settlement over screening test denials
The New York State Attorney General’s office has reached a settlement with Rochester–based Excellus BlueCross BlueShield that will require the insurer to issue refunds after
BrandYourself takes home major award from SXSW
SYRACUSE — A Syracuse–based company won the award for best bootstrapped startup at the fourth annual SXSW Accelerator in Austin, Texas. BrandYourself.com, a tenant at
Local unemployment rates inch up
Area unemployment rates crept up in January, according to figures released by the state Department of Labor. The unemployment rate for the Binghamton area was
O’Brien & Gere moves manufacturing unit
CLAY — O’Brien & Gere’s manufacturing operation has a new home at a 160,000-square-foot building in Clay. The engineering firm relocated its manufacturing business to
Federal storm aid expected to top $1.3 billion in NY
Federal disaster aid funneled into New York to help repair damage from Hurricane Irene and Tropical Storm Lee will total more than $1.3 billion, according
Metro Mattress opens new Albany-area store
SYRACUSE — Syracuse–based Metro Mattress opened its 45th store at 279 Troy Road in East Greenbush in the Rensselaer County Plaza. This is the second
Road trip to focus on manufacturing
AUBURN — Cayuga Community College (CCC) is leading a daylong trip on March 22 to three area manufacturers as part of its Entrepreneurial Road Trip
Roberts Office Furniture Concepts opens showroom
CICERO — Roberts Office Furniture Concepts, Inc. is opening its first design showroom in the Syracuse area, moving into the site of a former Hechinger home-improvement store. The showroom, which Roberts is leasing at 7387 Frontage Road in Cicero, is 40,000 square feet. The company scheduled a grand opening for March 13. Roberts designs, fabricates,
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CICERO — Roberts Office Furniture Concepts, Inc. is opening its first design showroom in the Syracuse area, moving into the site of a former Hechinger home-improvement store.
The showroom, which Roberts is leasing at 7387 Frontage Road in Cicero, is 40,000 square feet. The company scheduled a grand opening for March 13.
Roberts designs, fabricates, and remanufactures office furniture. It is headquartered at 7327 Henry Clay Boulevard in Clay.
The new showroom is a way to teach consumers about remanufactured furniture, says Scott Barcza, president and co-owner of Roberts Office Furniture Concepts. Customers must sometimes be convinced that the furniture is equal in quality to new products, he says.
“It’s an educational showroom more than anything,” Barcza says. “People who come in will leave being able to make educated decisions.”
Remanufacturing involves dismantling furniture and rebuilding it. Roberts Office Furniture Concepts refinishes any worn surfaces and replaces damaged parts. Its capabilities range from powder coating to manufacturing new steel kick plates.
“Remanufacturing is redevelopment of a product back to its [original equipment manufacturer] finish,” Barcza says. “Our materials are the same materials that the manufacturers use.”
The new Roberts showroom received $150,000 in renovations. Improvements include new carpet, walls, and paint, as well as energy-efficient lighting tied to motion sensors. Longley Jones Management Corp. manages the building and also managed renovations, according to Barcza.
Roberts handled the building’s interior design. The company financed work on the showroom using a loan from Beacon Federal.
The new showroom will allow Roberts Office Furniture Concepts to display its full range of office furniture for clients, Barcza says.
“Most of our corporate users don’t know the breadth of what we do,” he says. “They want to see more.”
The showroom will even be useful for out-of-state clients, which make up about 60 percent of Roberts’ sales, according to Barcza. Out-of-state clients have visited Roberts’ headquarters in Cicero in the past, but have come to view its remanufacturing process. Now, they will be able to go to the showroom to see its range of products.
Roberts Office Furniture Concepts focuses on selling in Ohio and states to the east of the Buckeye State, ranging as far south as North Carolina and as far north as New Hampshire. Its corporate clients are often interested in remanufactured furniture because the company reuses material and is environmentally friendly, according to Barcza.
“Our [client] base is that corporate level that has sustainability policies in place,” he says. “In Syracuse, it’s an incredibly different market.”
Just 40 percent of Roberts’ sales take place in New York, and most of those sales are in Rochester, not Syracuse, Barcza says. That’s because of a retail location, Office Werks of Rochester, that sells Roberts Office Furniture Concepts products. Roberts owns half of that retail operation, and a partner, Bret DeVito, owns the other half.
Roberts officials hope the introduction of a showroom will boost sales to businesses in Central New York.
“They will see that remanufactured furniture is indistinguishable from new,” says Roberts Executive Vice President Patrick Anson. “If there are any questions, we’ll be prepared to come over [to Roberts headquarters in Clay] to where they can actually see the remanufacturing process.”
About 10 employees will work at the new showroom. Roberts plans to add some employees to help staff the new store, but company leaders do not yet know how many they will add. Staff working at the showroom will be dual-purpose employees who also work at Roberts’ headquarters in Clay.
Roberts Office Furniture Concepts currently does all of its manufacturing and design work at its Clay headquarters, which is an 80,000-square-foot building that the company owns. It also stocks some inventory in the building, although Roberts leaders would like to lease another facility in the area to take over those storage duties.
The company will shift some of its design capabilities to the new design showroom. Three to five designers will work at the showroom at one time, offering expertise in interior design and the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) program.
Sustainable-furniture purchases — furniture that contains postconsumer material, salvaged material, renewable material, or locally processed material — can contribute to points needed for LEED certification.
Roberts Office Furniture Concepts currently has 47 full-time employees on its payroll, about 10 of which it added in the past year. The company added five of those employees with its eye on having them work at the new showroom.
The company also works closely with several affiliated firms, whose employees give it a total of about 85 people working from its headquarters. Roberts officials declined to name those other companies or elaborate on their affiliation.
Roberts Office Furniture Concepts has exclusive-supplier agreements with Roberts Metal Fabrication Shop at 1943 Teall Ave. in Salina and Roberts Millwork Shop in Williamstown in Oswego County. Roberts Office Furniture Concepts leaders declined to discuss those companies’ ownership.
Roberts Office Furniture Concepts also leases a 75,000-square-foot warehouse on Lepage Place in DeWitt.
Barcza declined to share revenue totals for Roberts Office Furniture Concepts. However, he says the company plans 30 percent revenue growth over the next three years.
Scott Barcza owns Roberts Office Furniture Concepts along with his father, Robert Barcza. The son owns 20 percent of the company, while the father owns 80 percent.
Armory Square hotel project gets off the ground at last
SYRACUSE — Construction began March 1 on a new seven-story hotel in downtown Syracuse’s Armory Square after nearly four years. RHS Holdings, LLC announced the project in 2008, but it was delayed by financing issues in the wake of the economic downturn and financial crisis of recent years. Financing for the $30 million project closed
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SYRACUSE — Construction began March 1 on a new seven-story hotel in downtown Syracuse’s Armory Square after nearly four years.
RHS Holdings, LLC announced the project in 2008, but it was delayed by financing issues in the wake of the economic downturn and financial crisis of recent years. Financing for the $30 million project closed Feb. 24 with M&T Bank.
“It was such a good idea,” RHS’ Richard Sykes says. “We felt very confident it was the right thing to do. We’re excited to finally start building.”
The 180-room, 160,000-square-foot building will house a combined Marriott Courtyard and Residence Inn. It’s the first new construction on such a combined hotel in the Northeast, Sykes says.
Other combined Courtyard-Residence Inn hotels exist, but they are renovation projects or upgrades of previous buildings, he says.
In addition to financing from M&T, the project is in line for a $2 million loan from the Empire State Development Corp., a $500,000 grant from the city of Syracuse, waivers for sales tax on construction materials and the mortgage tax, and a payment-in-lieu-of-taxes agreement.
The hotel will create 125 full- and part-time jobs once complete, in addition to 200 jobs during construction.
The hotel is expected to open in May 2013. RHS expects the Marriott project to house an annual total of more than 90,000 guests, who are estimated to spend more than $500 a day each. The project is forecast to generate about $2.1 million in sales -tax revenue every year and more than $400,000 in annual hotel-tax revenue.
The hotel will target both business travelers and extended-stay guests, Sykes says.
The building will be located at 300 W. Fayette St., the site of an existing parking lot adjacent to the building that houses the headquarters of engineering firm O’Brien & Gere.
LeChase Construction, which is based in Rochester but has a Syracuse office, is the general contractor for the project.
Syracuse–based Schopfer Architects, LLP designed the building.
Scrap yard announces $5 million renovation project
BINGHAMTON — Ben Weitsman of Binghamton has launched a $5 million renovation and upgrade project at its scrap yard facility. “This multi-million dollar upgrade will
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.