Grand Opening Of Vons On Catalina Island

The Broadway Glass team was proud to take part in getting the Vons on Catalina Island ready for it’s grand opening today!  Our expert team was on-site on the island working hard installing the glass windows and storefront for this wonderful addition to the island.  If you’re out on Catalina today or anytime soon visit the store and take a look!

Broadway Glass Working On The All New Ballast Point At Downtown Disney

The Broadway Glass team has been hard at work putting in custom glass doors and windows at the all new Ballast Point at Downtown Disney.  We’re very excited to be a part of this project, and the site is looking fantastic as it nears completion.  You can see a few photos on our Instagram page @broadway_glass

The Disney Blog previously announced this project back in January 2018, and have since added an update:

As we’ve previously announced, Ballast Point, the popular San Diego-based brewer, will open its first Orange County location in the Downtown Disney District at the Disneyland Resort this fall.

The 7,000 sq. ft. family-friendly eatery will house Downtown Disney District’s first-ever on-site brewery, tasting room, kitchen and outdoor beer garden. The high-quality, award-winning beers complement its extensive selection of local, sustainable and seasonal fare – salads, small plates, flatbreads and entrees. The menu will feature its most popular dishes, such as Baja-style fish tacos and a house-made pretzel with a beer mustard, along with items exclusive to the Downtown Disney District location. Entrees can be paired with specialty beers from the extensive beer portfolio. In addition

READ THE COMPLETE ARTICLE HERE

Broadway Glass & Mirror, Inc. Celebrating 60 Years In Business

(Photograph by the Business Journal’s Evan Patrick Kelly)

Original Article from Long Beach Business Journal

Broadway Glass & Mirror Inc. is celebrating its 60th anniversary today, September 1. The business, known for lighting up Broadway at night with its classic sign, was purchased by owner Ron DeWolf’s grandparents in 1955. DeWolf (pictured) started working at the family business about 35 years ago to help out his family, and never left. In 2008, he purchased his sister’s share in the business to become sole owner. Since then, DeWolf acquired a San Pedro business, Mac’s Glass, and opened a new headquarters in Westside Long Beach. While the business originally focused on glass replacement for residences and autos, over time it grew to include large commercial projects. The diversity of projects Broadway Glass & Mirror is able to accommodate is part of the reason it has been successful, DeWolf told the Business Journal. “Being able to serve all facets of the industry . . . has helped us stay in business as long as we have,” he said. Customers range from local residents looking to replace glass in a picture frame to the Long Beachbased national health care provider Molina Healthcare, he noted. A recent local project was installing glass for the Gelson’s supermarket near Belmont Shore. “Our biggest thing we believe in, and feel is one of the reasons we have been able to endure for 60 years, is that . . . we really do try to put our customers first,” DeWolf said. Broadway Glass & Mirror’s showroom and retail store is located at 2523 E. Broadway. Call 562/434-8405 for more information.

Broadway Glass has A Clear Vision

Original article found on ocregister.com

Broadway Glass and Mirror Photo By Jeff Gritchen, OC Register Staff Photographer

Broadway Glass & Mirror isn’t the biggest glass installer in the area, but it has become one of the larger diversified businesses that divides its revenue between commercial and residential streams.

Owner Ron DeWolf bought Broadway Glass, which has been in business since 1954, from his sister in 2008 after they inherited it 14 years earlier from their grandparents, James and Verta DeWolf.

Since the Great Recession, Ron DeWolf has invested heavily in the tiny glass and mirror shop that his grandparents had made a brand-name fixture for decades on Broadway. He has stepped up bidding on commercial jobs, in addition to keeping true to the bread-and-butter business of cutting glass for walk-in customers for items such as picture frames and windows.

“We aggressively looked for business rather than wait for it to come to us,” DeWolf said.

It’s not uncommon to see Broadway Glass hanging scaffolding outside of some high-rise buildings downtown to replace safety-glass windows. For instance, just a week ago, Broadway added several huge window panels on the 15th floor of 300 Oceangate, where Molina Healthcare Inc. is adding an event hall. The windows extend from floor to ceiling, giving an unobstructed scenic view of roughly two-thirds of the floor to downtown Long Beach and the twin seaports of Long Beach and Los Angeles.

Some of its biggest jobs have included installation of windows at a fire station in Hollywood and 550 shower enclosures at the swanky W Hotel in Hollywood.

It also has added windows at the Long Beach Convention Center, Hyatt Regency, Los Alamitos Elementary School, Long Beach Senior Arts Colony on East Anaheim Street and several high-rise residential towers in downtown Long Beach.

At the moment, DeWolf is juggling an expansion of the business to West Long Beach and San Pedro and building up more commercial work simultaneously. He hired a president to help run operations from 2010 to July and free the company to more aggressively expand through acquisitions. DeWolf pulled back the reins on expansion, shedding the president as he cautiously reevaluated the pace of growth.

“It was more than I expected,” said DeWolf, who said he took on more than he could handle.

In 2012, DeWolf acquired the assets of bankrupt-Mac’s Glass & Mirror at 1044 S. Gaffey St. in San Pedro and renamed the business Mac’s Glass Inc.

He also began leasing a 7,500-square-foot warehouse at 2001 W. 16th St. in Long Beach, where he plans to move Broadway’s headquarters as well as keep his fleet of vehicles for hauling plate glass. He already has carved out offices in the building in the industrial neighborhood, where he’ll open the main headquarters in a month or two, he said.

The retail shop on Broadway will remain. There are no plans to move that long-time fixture from Broadway, he said.

DeWolf, like his grandparents before him, lives in the top floor of the glass shop, in the rear. He plans to remodel some of the warehousing behind the store to expand his own personal space.

Since buying the business from his sister, Denise, in 2008, DeWolf is finally hitting his stride in the business.

Before 2013, the best-ever year for revenue was the year in which DeWolf bought the business, mainly because Broadway Glass was still fulfilling commercial orders placed before the economic crash.

The business felt the lingering effects from the recession in 2009 to 2012 but started seeing an upswing in revenue afterward.

“We always felt like since we had been such a local business for so long, it really helped us weather the economic downturn,” DeWolf said.

Read the complete article on ocregister.com