flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Multifamily renovation now drives growth for national restoration business

Multifamily Housing

Multifamily renovation now drives growth for national restoration business

Response Team 1 has established a national footprint through acquisitions. 


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | March 10, 2015
Multifamily renovation now drives growth for national restoration business

Photo courtesy Response Team 1.

When investor John Goense started Response Team 1 in 2010 by acquiring BKA General Contractors in Nashville, he anticipated that his company, as it expanded, would focus primarily on single-family disaster restoration projects from fires, flooding, snowstorms and other such events that were covered by homeowners insurance.

The early performance of that business certainly indicated that it was on the right track. Its revenue from 2010 to 2013 increased by 1,124%, making Response Team 1 one America’s fastest-growing private companies, according to Inc. magazine. It currently claims to be the country’s largest single-family restoration business.

During that four-year period, Response Team 1 also developed what Goense, its CEO and chairman, says was “a small, in-house renovation business” for commercial clients that had either bought a property or wanted to upgrade an existing building. Then, last November, the Wheeling, Ill.-based company acquired The Renovation Group (TRG) in Brentwood, Tenn. This deal catapulted Response Team 1 into the ranks of the country’s top multifamily renovators.

Multifamily and commercial projects now account for 50% of Response Team 1’s revenue, which last year hit $173 million.

The biggest commercial project Response Team 1 has taken on so far has been the restoration of a courthouse in Wisconsin. Its multifamily work, according to its website, includes fire and smoke damage restoration, mold removal and remediation, water damage repair, and remodeling. Most of its projects are for midrise apartment and college campus buildings. “We’re more focused on working with property owners and managers than with HOAs,” Goense explains. And campus projects are mostly restorations. (Arizona State University is one of its largest customers.)

Response Team 1, which operates 25 offices that serve 34 states in the West, Midwest, and Southeast, is one of several businesses owned by Chicago-based Goense & Company, a private equity investment firm that Goense and his partner Erik Bloom formed in 2008. Its investment strategy has been to target small to midsize companies with market niches or that operate in fragmented industries. The firm’s portfolio, according to its website, includes a document imaging dealer; a pharmacy automation company; electrical, plumbing, and drywall contractors; and a provider of maintenance and installation services for voice, data, wireless, paging, and point of sale systems for retailers.

Darren Magda, who started TRG as a deck builder 20 years ago and shifted to multifamily renovation a decade ago, says he became interested it joining forces with a larger enterprise when clients started asking TRG to do jobs on their apartment buildings in places like Texas and California, well beyond its geographic comfort zone. Magda says that because Response Team 1 has a “national footprint,” as well as a local presence in places like Denver and Phoenix, TRG can coordinate labor and project management for clients through with buildings in different parts of the country.

Response Team 1 merged TRG with CAPRO, a multifamily renovation company based in Raleigh, N.C., that Response Team 1 had spun off several years earlier.  Combined, the two renovators generated about $24 million in revenue last year, and Magda—who stayed on as a vice president with Response Team 1—thinks that figure could rise by at least 50% in 2015 under Response Team 1’s corporate umbrella.

Goense expects Response Team 1, in total, to generate about $200 million from its existing offices in 2015, and another $50 million to $100 million from mergers and acquisitions. “I look at our service area, and it only represents 12% if the U.S. population.” When he spoke with BD+C in early March, Response Team 1 had just established a fourth region, the Mid Atlantic, that would serve residential and commercial customers in Philadelphia and southern New Jersey, Baltimore, and Washington D.C.

Response Team 1’s expansion is being driven primarily by its regional footprint; Goense’s goal is for his company to serve every 1 million-plus market within its regions.

Like other construction companies, Response Team 1’s ability to grow is contingent on maintaining a reliable workforce. “That’s one of the hardest things for businesses like ours,” he says. However, Goense states that his company “has a very active flow of people coming to us.” Response Team 1 recently set up an internal “university” for training purposes. And, he adds, “we use a lot of subs,” and has steady access to them because “we pay fairly and on time.”

Related Stories

| Jul 17, 2014

A high-rise with outdoor, vertical community space? It's possible! [slideshow]

Danish design firm C.F. Møller has developed a novel way to increase community space without compromising privacy or indoor space.

| Jul 11, 2014

First look: Jeanne Gang reinterprets San Francisco Bay windows in new skyscraper scheme

Chicago architect Jeanne Gang has designed a 40-story residential building in San Francisco that is inspired by the city's omnipresent bay windows.

| Jul 10, 2014

Unique design of Toronto's townhome The Tree House

Plans for a new Toronto townhome brings cutting-edge design.

| Jul 7, 2014

7 emerging design trends in brick buildings

From wild architectural shapes to unique color blends and pattern arrangements, these projects demonstrate the design possibilities of brick. 

| Jul 7, 2014

A climate-controlled city is Dubai's newest colossal project

To add to Dubai's already impressive portfolio of world's tallest tower and world's largest natural flower garden, Dubai Holding has plans to build the world's largest climate-controlled city.

| Jul 3, 2014

Gehry edits Canadian skyscraper plan to be 'more Toronto'

After being criticized for the original tower complex, architect Frank Gehry unveils a new design that is more subtle, and "more Toronto."

| Jul 2, 2014

SHoP designs what would be Brooklyn's tallest building

JDS Development partners with SHoP to construct a 70-story building at 775-feet tall, unprecedented for downtown Brooklyn.

| Jun 30, 2014

Research finds continued growth of design-build throughout United States

New research findings indicate that for the first time more than half of projects above $10 million are being completed through design-build project delivery. 

| Jun 30, 2014

Narrow San Francisco lots to be developed into micro-units

As a solution to San Francisco’s density and low housing supply compared to demand, local firms Build Inc. and Macy Architecture each are to build micro-unit housing in a small parcel of land in Hayes Valley.

| Jun 30, 2014

Harvard releases the State of the Nation’s Housing 2014

Although the housing industry saw notable increases in construction, home prices, and sales in 2013, household growth has yet to fully recover from the effects of the recession, according to a new Harvard University report. 

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




Legislation

Efforts to encourage more housing projects on California coast stall

A movement to encourage more housing projects along the California coast has stalled out in the California legislature. Earlier this year, lawmakers, with the backing of some housing activists, introduced a series of bills aimed at making it easier to build apartments and accessory dwelling units along California’s highly regulated coast. 

halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021