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"It didn't take a lot of capital to
sell the houses,
so it allowed us to get going." —Victor
Bogard Sr.
Four generations of the Bogard family gather
at the company's Santa Cruz office. From left are: Chip Bogaard,
Rex Bogaard,
Brad Bogard, Jim Bogard, Vic Bogard Jr. and Jared Bogaard.
Seated at center is family patriarch and company founder
Vic Bogard Sr. The younger members of the clan spell
their last names with a double 'a,' reclaiming the
original Dutch
spelling.
Victor Bogard Sr. remembers the day when you
could buy a piece of land in Santa Cruz for a mere $2,100
and building permits were just $50. Homes cost around $22,500
back then, less than securing some permits now. That was
1947, when Bogard moved to Santa Cruz and began building
a house for his family. The effort caught the eye of a neighbor
and soon more requests followed.
Such was the era 54 years ago, a simple time Bogard refers
to as the "happy days" of construction. With help
from land temporarily donated by property owners, Bogard
Construction was able to expand rapidly, building homes,
selling them and paying the owner later.
"It didn't take a lot of capital to sell
the houses, so it allowed us to get going," he said. "We
always hired capable craftsmen. We didn't use any real-estate
agents.
We just sold them ourselves."
A half-century later, Bogard Construction is a $35 million-a-year
business, employing 15 people in its office and 50 to
150 in the field. Combined with its construction management
division, Strategic
Construction Management, and a joint
venture partnership,
Bogard+Kitchell, it has posted $200 million in managed
revenues in the past five years.
Yet call the company and chances are you will be dealing
with a Bogard. Victor Sr., now 86, has three sons and
two grandsons running the company. Victor Jr., 62,
is the chairman
of the board, Brad, 54, is chief operating officer,
and Jim, 51, is executive vice president. Victor Jr.'s
son
Chip is
president, and Jim's son Jared is vice president.
"They haven't gotten so corporate as to
lose the touch of family," said David Robison, who heads Strategic Construction
Management. "As close as they are as a family, they
treat everyone who works here the same way."
"
It's the only thing I've ever known," said Chip Bogaard. "Only
recently have I known how nice a thing it is. We have breakfast
every day, have lunch together, take some vacations together
and go to the same church."
The Bogard family and Bogard
Construction have grown with Santa Cruz. Their
work is everywhere: from UC Santa Cruz to the McPherson Center
for Art and History
to Seagate Technologies, the main Santa Cruz
Medical Clinic office and Dominican
Hospital. Schools, churches,
and entire
residential neighborhoods bear its labor.
When a local lawyer, Louis Rittenhouse, offered
his land in the Westlake area "on spec," he
got the company rolling, leading to the construction
of 500 homes by the
mid-1960s.
In the early 1950s, Bogard donated Westlake
Pond and the park around it to the city. He
originally
wanted
conditions
attached on how the city would maintain it,
but the city refused. He said now the city
has done
a "good" job,
though not "great."
Other early homes were around Opal Cliffs,
land which had been available cheap in the
early 1940s
because
of fear
the Japanese would land on the beaches during
the war.
Street names such as Sheldon (the city Victor
grew up in), Roger (the name of his brother-in-law),
Bradley (his son),
Iowa (his home state), and Archer (where
he went to school)
come from Victor Bogard Sr.'s past.
The university's arrival got the company
into commercial work, which is now its
main focus.
The Applied Sciences building was the firm's
first sole commercial job and the terrain
made it one
of its most
challenging.
Victor Sr. remembers having to dig 104
pier holes, some 40 inches wide, extending
100
feet.
"There were a lot of caves down there," he
said. "Drills
sometimes would fall into them."
The challenge proved a boon in some ways.
Every time they encountered a cave,
it meant pouring
more concrete.
"It meant more money because we were bding
paid per yard," he
said.
Bogard Construction has since developed
strip malls from Riverside and Ventura
counties
to Colorado.
It has built
Albertsons, Luckys and Safeways up
and down the coast, as well as 54
Longs Drugs
stores.
In 1990, it was ranked 390th in the
country in construction square
footage. In 1989,
the company
ranked 26th
in retail shopping center construction.
Five years ago,
the Bogards
created Strategic Construction
Management, to provide preconstruction and construction
management
services.
Robison said diversification has
kept the company strong even
shen the economy
is
not. "There isn't much that
has been built that Bogard hasn't been a part of" locally,
he said.
Some of the projects include
the Chestnut
Street Apartments,
Twin
Lakes Church,
Long
Marine Lab and, under Bogard+Kitchell,
several new projects at Cabrillo
College. They are building
a gymnasium at the
Carmel
Mission and
working on a $6
million house in Carmel Valley.
"We've been busy the last couple of years," said
Jim Bogard. "A lot of it has been the direct expansion
of the Silicon Vally area. Most of our work is in Northern
California
so we are impacted by that."
The construction industry,
as run by the second generation
of Bogards,
is
vastly
different than when Victor
Sr. was conduting most
of it. The elder Bogard said
he
never took
much to computers.
"You can bid a job much more accurately
now," he said. "We
did it the hard way.
Now they just push some buttons and get a readout."
However, in most other
areas, business does
take longer.
Brad Bogard swears he
still comes across people
who
have contracts
with his
father written
on the back
of business
cards. Contracts today
can run 150 pages.
"The kinds of things we do that are necessary
today were not necessary 20 or 30 years ago," says Victor
Jr. "My
dad used to go down
and get permits in an hour. Now it can take three years for
some projects."
All the Bogards agree
most of the regulations
exist
for good
reasons,
but they do
add time and money,
they say.
Another change is
a more team-oriented
approach
between owner,
architects and contractors,
a relationship
which was more adversarial
in the
past,
Jim
Bogard said.
"Clients are also more sophisticated now
than they used to be and demand a lot more from a general
contractor in way
of service," said
Victor Jr.
The Bogards recently
added a fourth
generation
to their payroll.
Chip's
son, Rex, an
eighth-grader,
works summers
and holidays
at the office.
The younger
generation
is taking
on its own personality
as well.
Chip and
Jared
have
added an
extra letter "a" to
the Bogaard name, something their grandfather dropped because
of frequent misspellings years ago. The change is a source
of confusion for some people, but Chip hints it was instigated
by his grandfather.
Victor Sr.
said it is
exciting
to watch
his
family continue
the business.
"You think after 40 years I would be able
to contribute something, but I think they're doing better
than their old man," he
said.
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