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South Mountain Company

Martha’s Vineyard’s integrated design/build company

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Our History
  • Humble Beginnings
  • The Early Eighties
  • Embracing Worker Ownership
  • Stumbling Towards the Nineties
  • Coming of Age
  • Twenty Years Later
  • Our New Home
  • Finding Our Groove
  • The Crash
  • Restoration
  • And Today. . .

Our History

by John Abrams, Founder & CEO

In 2022, South Mountain celebrates year 35 as an worker-owned company and year 49 in business. Hard to believe. This is not a business that developed according to a plan; it just happened. In the early days, in various rural areas, we spent our time learning to put roofs over our heads and keep the rain out. Design and building became a passion, and as our skills grew it evolved into our work. People actually began to pay us to do those things. But the whole concept of business was, to me, in the late sixties and seventies, antithetical to my sense of myself. What drove me was design, and building, and community, not business.

Humble Beginnings

The company began as a cabinet making and woodworking shop in New City, New York in 1973. In 1975 my partner Mitchell Posin and I came to Martha’s Vineyard to design and build a house for my parents. Our quirky name (mountains on Martha’s Vineyard??) comes from our first location on South Mountain Road. When we came to the Vineyard we drove our 1951 International flatbed truck. On its doors my wife Chris had painted South Mountain Woodwork in fine calligraphy. We didn’t want to re-paint, so we kept the name, later adjusting to South Mountain Company. In later years I tried to change the name to something more appropriate, but nobody would hear of it! So South Mountain Company we are.

The new Vineyard building project was like grad school for us (undergrad had been Harry Saxman’s house in Vermont in 1973, the first house we ever built. We didn’t have a clue how to do it. Each day we worked hard at the jobsite; each night we spread out on the floor at home with a pile of carpentry and building books, desperately trying to figure out how to do the next day’s work. Crash course!). Like Harry Saxman, my parents had the (mostly false) impression that we could actually design and build them a house. Their faith in us helped us to believe we could.
We bit off more than we could chew. We planned to spend six months on the Vineyard, but a full year later we were still hustling to finish this detailed, timber framed house with handmade doors, windows, cabinetry, and built-ins.

Then we were islanders

During this prolonged (and exciting) struggle, new projects came our way, and we stayed on the island (a great surprise to us; we never expected to). In the fall of 1975 we set up in Roger Allen’s old shop at the Allen Farm and South Mountain Company began to take shape.

A family business devoted to craft and alternatives

From the beginning, our calling card was design/build. Our abilities were crude and our aspirations high. Key elements were our devotion to woodwork and our commitment to exploring alternatives to conventional construction practices. We combined timber framing, passive solar, and an eclectic, unschooled design sense to make learn-by-doing buildings with mixed success. We had no formal training so we were unconstrained by knowing what couldn’t be done. The harsh Vineyard winds drove water in and around the poorly flashed walls and roofs that were our best early efforts. We spent equal time admiring our accomplishments and doggedly fixing a multitude of mistakes.

During the years 1976-1978 we hired Steve Sinnett, Heikki Soikkeli, and Pete Ives in quick succession.

Pete Ives’ story bears telling. He came to work in 1978. At the time he was an accomplished mason, painter, drywaller, floor sander, tilesetter, and surfer. He’d never done a lick of carpentry. He said, “Just tell me what to do. I’ll do anything, as long as I don’t have to tell anyone else what to do.” He was loyal, dedicated, and skilled, but he was afraid of responsibility. He began to find confidence in his work. He learned to be a very good carpenter and then a project lead, first reluctantly, then with pride. So much for not telling people what to do. Pete would become one of the original employee owners when we restructured in 1987.

In those years South Mountain was a true family business. My wife Chris and Mitchell’s wife Clarissa were as involved as employees. They plastered and painted, Chris prepared the bills and picked up materials in Boston, and we all lived at the Allen Farm.

Our first passive solar house

The end of the seventies was filled with milestone events. We designed and built a small house for Rob Kendall, a dedicated solar advocate. It was our first earth integrated passive solar house and a harbinger of things to come. We designed and built a house for Eli and Frimi Sagan that was more refined, more carefully designed, and more complex than anything we had done to date. The Sagans’ great faith in us pushed us further, and their house was an important turning point in our young company’s life.

I stopped doing carpentry and concentrated on design and project management.

We built two projects that we didn’t design, both designed by Boston architects. The projects went okay, I guess, but they confirmed our devotion to design/build integration. It’s now been over 40 years since we built anything we didn’t design.

In 1979 we designed and built a solar greenhouse attached to the Edgartown School with help from the nonprofit Energy Resource Group (which we had helped to form), and teachers and students. It was our first significant venture into community demonstration work. It felt good, and it was clear there would be more of this in our future.

The Early Eighties

Growth, progress, and constant change defined this decade. At the end of 1980 Heikki left to go into business for himself. Mitchell’s interest in building gradually diminished as his commitment to farming increased. In 1982 he withdrew from South Mountain to devote himself full time to the Allen Farm Sheep and Wool Company. Steve and Pete remained, and others were hired along the way.

Our interest in affordable housing came into focus at the beginning of the decade. In 1980 we combined this commitment with our growing passive solar expertise to build two wonderful (we think!) little houses, for Madeline Blakeley and Cathy Weiss, that were financed by Farmers’ Home Administration low interest loans.

These state-of-the-art energy efficient houses cost about $45,000, soup to nuts, and their owners were thrilled beyond reason. Those were the days!

The following year, 1981, my friend Lee Halprin and I built a fine little earth-integrated passive solar office next to our shop at the Allen Farm. Today that building has become the farm’s retail shop. I loved that place – a real honest-to-god office and design studio at last.

Lee played another important role in the development of South Mountain – as supporter and critic. He followed our work closely, always had plenty to say, and never minced words. My colleagues and I were on a simple dual mission: keep working and build the perfect house. We kept working. We were less successful at the other, of course. But we learned a thing or two. When it came to money, however, we didn’t have a clue.

The defining Halprin moment came one afternoon when we were touring some of our projects. He admired the work. “Beautiful work,” he said. “Making any money?”

“No way,” I laughed.

“Nice idea, Abrams. Novel, anyway. Subsidized housing for the rich!”

Ouch! My friend’s blunt assessment drove me to start thinking seriously about business. If we were going to give away our services, at least we better give them to someone in need. It was time to stop selling short the very efforts upon which our livelihood depended and our ability to make a difference. At that moment, I suppose, South Mountain truly began to be a real enterprise.

Through the middle years of the eighties there were significant projects, one after the other. In 1983 we built several houses at once for the first time and learned to juggle multiple projects. When the design work became too much for me to handle, Peter Rodegast was hired to help.

“The shop is on fire!”

One night in 1984, asleep in our new house up the hill from the Allen Farm, Chris and I were awakened by Vern Welch, who was shaking my shoulder and yelling in my ear, “John, wake up! Wake up! The shop’s on fire!” I jumped out of bed, threw on my clothes and bolted out the door and down the hill. The sky was bright. Flames leaped above the hilltop. The shop was engulfed in fire and the firefighters had their hoses aimed at our precious little office, which was smoking but not yet burning. They managed to save it; my gratitude was boundless. The next few days we cleaned up the wreckage and hauled truckload after truckload of twisted metal to the Chilmark dump. It was a sad scene: all our wonderful old hand tools and fine cast iron machines, and that fine funky old barn, forever gone.

We regrouped soon after and began to build a new shop up the hill on our own property. A few months later we moved into new quarters with a well-equipped shop below and spacious offices above. The newness was strange, but the space felt good. We were back on track.

Embracing Worker Ownership

Internal rumblings about change began to gather momentum that year. Steve and Pete felt that they wanted to stay with South Mountain, but there had to be more in it for them than an hourly wage. We also felt the need to formalize a process which would facilitate and ensure greater participation in decision-making, more responsibility on the part of the employees, and the creation of a group of true employee stockholders. Until that time, the company had been so small and familial that these issues were not apparent, but with growth they became more visible and urgent.

In 1986, at Steve’s urging, we began discussions about a conversion to worker ownership. We were excited by the possibilities that emerged from these discussions and frightened by the implications of the decisions we were about to make. With some trepidation we hired Peter Pitegoff, an attorney at the Industrial Cooperatives Association in Cambridge, to advise and assist us with the transition and restructuring. I sold the company to a group which consisted of Steve, Pete, and me. We became three equal owners. Our jobs didn’t change – I still managed the company and they were still job project leads – but our responsibilities did. We introduced several forms of profit sharing. There were seven other employees at the time of the restructuring.

Stumbling Towards the Nineties

In 1988 we built two of our finest small houses to date, the Ungerleider Guest House and the Hass House, and continued our lucky string of wonderful clients who, by the end of the projects, became friends and supporters. We hired Billy Dillon, an accomplished carpenter, and the first formally trained carpenter at South Mountain, to become our next project lead.

The next year we designed and built three modest houses for the Dukes County Regional Housing Authority (DCRHA). This was a big step into the public arena for us. The DCRHA owned a number of properties, but lacked the capacity to do anything with them. We proposed to design and build three houses on their sites, and orchestrate the entire development process. They would take care of financing the project and selecting the recipients. We shook hands and went to work. We labored over the design, enlisted our trade partners to work at low rates, convinced our suppliers to discount materials, and we still had to contribute financially ourselves to make the project work. It was a wonderful project, we survived it well, and it reminded us that projects of this nature were important to us. By keeping plenty of lucrative work going we could afford to help underwrite projects like these on a regular basis.

About this time we began to feel that our continued use of old growth fir, cedar, and redwood was morally objectionable, and that it was becoming harder and harder to get high quality wood. We began to look for sources of salvage lumber, found many, and began to buy. It was like the creation of a new business, as the extensive use of salvage wood required new business, design, and building practices. We had to inventory supplies and design around availability, and both the shop and the crews had to learn how to effectively use the materials. We rented the Windy Gates barn for wood storage, and began to increase our use of salvage and certified wood.

The decade ended with a solid group of 11 working at South Mountain. Steve Sinnett had departed (his new company, Indigo Farm, was doing our landscape design and building, and they do much of it to this day). Peter Rodegast and Mike Drezner had joined Pete and me as new owners, and more were on their way. Near the end of the 80’s we hired Jim Vercruysse, a talented and experienced woodworker, to run the shop.

Coming of Age

Our coming-of-age decade, without question, was the nineties. During those years we grew, we prospered, we matured, we refined our goals, and we learned how to be an employee owned, values-driven company that is an integral part of our small community.

In 1990, after I took a trip to Denmark to study cohousing communities, we attempted to develop a property called the Rogers Farm to further our affordable housing goals. It didn’t work out, but the thinking that went into it led to the Island Cohousing Project that we began in 1996.

The early part of the decade was filled with wonderful clients and projects: Weinstock, Hamermesh, Thulin. We solidified our landscape design and construction relationship with Indigo Farm; when Sanford Evans of Indigo began to do all our landscape design we were able to achieve a new level of design sophistication that matched site with house and seamlessly welded the two.

In early 1992 we hired Tim Mathiesen to run South Mountain Solar – specifically to distribute a solar water heating system that we liked. The company that made the system went belly up a few years later, and South Mountain Solar fizzled, but Tim became our first IT person and our solar endeavors would be reborn years later.

Building networks of strength

I had become involved in the work of the Northeast Sustainable Energy Association (NESEA) in the late 80’s, organizing Green Building conferences and workshops. I collaborated there with an architect, Bruce Coldham, and an engineer, Marc Rosenbaum. I liked and respected both. When the Wampanoags approached me in 1992 about their proposed Tribal Center, I realized it was a job South Mountain couldn’t quite handle, but one which would be exciting to do. I approached our Board, and Bruce and Marc, about forming a partnership between South Mountain and the two of them, specifically to do integrated design for environmentally advanced institutional and commercial projects. We agreed to form the ARC Design Group, submitted a proposal to the Wampanoags, and it was accepted. Thus began an extraordinary odyssey that resulted in the first building the Wampanoags had built, as a tribe, in several centuries. The building was completed at the end of 1993. Now, many years later, Marc has become a South Mountain employee and owner.

That same year we ran out of space at Windy Gates and began a search for commercial property. We bought a piece in the West Tisbury business district, built a storage building, and filled the yard with salvage material.

Making buildings last

By 1994, when we built the White/Josa-Jones house and the Lewis/Marshall house, we were using salvage wood for almost all our exposed wood inside and out. Our focus on solar and energy conservation had evolved to a more integrated and sophisticated approach to design which fully incorporated good building science, sun-tempering, and green material selection.

We developed a significant new practice: providing detailed Owner’s Manuals for each of our projects. Stewart Brand wrote extensively about our technique in his seminal book, How Buildings Learn. We are pleased that the practice has spread to many other companies.

The year 1995 was a watershed – we built our two largest projects to date, the Dick project in Menemsha and the Kohlberg project at Swan Neck. The Kohlberg project was a multi-million dollar development of a large family compound on 75 acres. The fundamental design goals were to house their entire clan comfortably and to maximize sensitivity to the fragile Great Pond environment. Our profits soared and profit sharing became significant.

That year Vicki Romanauskas became our second owner to depart when she moved to Rochester to be near the new love of her life. Deirdre Bohan was hired to take on her bookkeeping and office responsibilities. She soon made what was previously a full-time bookkeeping job into a half time job by streamlining it, so we decided she would devote the rest of her time to Interior Design education and the development of that part of our business. This became a great success.

Twenty Years Later

In August of 1995 we celebrated our 20th anniversary: clients, trade partners, associates, and friends all joined us for a spectacular celebration on a beautiful summer day.

The following year was complex. We did a tough, rushed commercial renovation at the a night club (The Hot Tin Roof), we dug into the Sounding renovation at Seven Gates, and we began design of two important projects: a four unit affordable housing project called Sepiessa and the tremendously complex Vagelos project (similar in scale to the Kohlberg project) on an 80 acre parcel on Chilmark’s North Shore. Patrick Lindsey had joined us as a third designer, and now Derrill Bazzy switched from field crew to office and became our fourth.

Sepiessa was a financial challenge, but a social and aesthetic success, and the Vagelos project was an opportunity to stretch our design and craftsmanship abilities substantially for clients who were willing to reach with us. We expanded our interior design services and our furniture-making abilities.

Our New Home

In 1997 we made a big decision to move to West Tisbury and develop new South Mountain facilities along with the Island Cohousing project, which required a complex four year path to reach completion. Sixteen houses and extensive common facilities were clustered on 30 acres of land and our new shop and office located on 6 adjacent acres. This was brand new territory for us. In July of 1999 we moved into generous, gracious, soulful new quarters, a far cry from our cramped space in Chilmark. The successful completion of Island Cohousing in July of 2000 was a major milestone for the company.

During the 90’s five new owners joined – Peggy MacKenzie, Billy Dillon, Peter D’Angelo, Jim Vercruysse, and Derrill Bazzy – followed in 2000 and 2001 by my son Pinto Abrams, Deirdre, and Phil Forest.

Finding Our Groove

If the 90’s was our coming-of-age decade, it was in the new century, at our new location, that we began to truly find our groove. In January of 2000 we held a two day company retreat called Future Sketch, during which we imagined our future, and that of the Vineyard, and made a series of commitments to ourselves and our community.

This pivotal event was our first significant attempt to chart our course far into the future. It has led to remarkable things.

During the next few years there was a diverse series of projects that culminated in 2003 with the Mazar House, perhaps the purest and most refined expression of our architectural and building philosophy of that time, and the House Moves project, in which we moved four houses, all slated for demolition, from four locations, to four lots owned by the town of Edgartown, and re-furbished them.

Essential new people joined the company. Architect Ryan Bushey brought great new talent to our design group, Siobhán Mullin brought strong financial skills, and Betsy Smith brought new professionalism to our office administration. Today Ryan directs Architecture & Engineering, Siobhán is the Director of Finance and Administration, and Betsy manages the office. All are owners.

Mastering the craft of business

During the winters of 2003 and 2004 I took six month sabbaticals to write my book, The Company We Keep. A number of employee-owners began to emerge from beneath the shadow of my leadership and come into their own. We formed a Management Committee to run the company in my absence and I joined it upon my return. Our collaborative style and distributed management was formalized. Along with the Management Committee, a group of other committees (Personnel, Design, Production, Education, etc.) began to take a more active role in running the company.

In 2005 we did our first formal strategic planning and established a series of goals for 2006 and 2007. Kane Bennett, our youngest project lead and owner, departed to go to engineering school.

In February 2006 we hosted the Next Level Network, a group of design/build companies from all over the country, for three days in February. We shared what we had learned, we learned from them, and we joined them. At the end of that year we completed our first Ten Year Plan.

We created a new business plan for South Mountain Energy, which would do energy audits and renewable energy outside of our own design/build projects. We decided to proceed. This endeavor, led at the beginning by Phil Forest and Rob Meyers, has been a great success, has expanded, and has become an important part of our identity and core business. It has evolved into Energy Technology. Rob is the director and department Phil is the solar project lead.

Planting seeds for the future

Gradually, we grew. We began to concentrate on hiring a group of younger employees who might form the nucleus of the next generation of South Mountain. We have begun to prepare for that next generation. Rocco Bellebuono and Aaron Beck brought youth, skill, and energy to our production group.

Our affordable housing efforts continued with Twin Oaks, completed in 2006, with the seminal Jenney Way project, completed in 2008, and with the planning of Eliakim’s Way for 2009 construction. These and a group of remarkable custom projects – Van Dyk, Davis, Vlachos – led us closer to the creation of Net Zero Energy homes.

In 2008 Deirdre became our Vice President and COO. I have been thrilled to have her as a partner, as I was for the support of the other standing members of our Management Committee (Mike Drezner and Jim Vercruysse for a few years), and the rotating members who have been so valuable (other board members rotate on and off the Management Committee, each doing six to nine month stints).

The Crash

Then came the crash in October 2008. It was like dominoes falling in a cascade of backlog-diminishing postponements. It was time to take a sobering look at who we are, what we do, and what the future might hold.

For 33 years, every South Mountain employee had come to work each day of each week of each month of each year and had productive work to do. Now, perhaps for the first time, that legacy might soon be jeopardized.

In January it looked like our best year ever, with wonderful opportunities ahead and a great backlog of good work. Immense progress was made on many fronts during the first half of the year. But the effects of the U.S. economic collapse came quickly. It became the year of trials and tribulations, tumultuous change, and scrambling to stay ahead of the wave.

But the events that made this year so dramatically different from any other also inspired us to open our minds, to think differently, and to address tough issues.

Difficulty and opportunity mingle; at times it is hard to distinguish one from the other.

It became clear to us that we needed to expand opportunities in our core work to maintain a stable workload, grow SMCo Energy to fill in the gaps and bring long-term workload stability, increase efficiency throughout the organization, and at the same time remain true to our values.

There were major accomplishments. It was our most profitable year ever. Betsy Smith and Greg Small became Owners.

But 2009 was the year of reckoning. As we recovered from the shock of the economic crash and the full dismemberment of the backlog we had come to expect and rely on, it was time to dig in and deal. We did so in several ways. We contended with the “unthinkable” – that is, not enough work for all – by making a tiered policy to implement if work was too meager. We began conscious, pro-active marketing. We re-considered our commitment to work only on the Vineyard.

We took the off-island plunge by accepting the assignment to design and build a Deep Energy Retrofit for the Woods Hole Research Center (a complex leap which proved to be tremendously rewarding in many ways) and we began to explore other opportunities in the Falmouth area.

Architect Ryan Bushey became an Owner. Long-time owner Tim Mathiesen left, after 17 years, to move to Vermont.

In 2010 Siobhán Mullin, our Finance Manager, became an Owner.

Restoration

In the year 2010, the realities truly came home to roost. No longer could we rely on pre-crash work that had yet to be completed. We had to sink all our abilities into creating new work, evaluating ourselves, and re-inventing the company.

Through a variety of means, we successfully did all three. We became a dramatically different company. Five long-time employees (two of them former Owners) departed, four by layoff and one, Peter Rodegast, by early retirement. Peter had been our fourth original owner and was with us for 27 years! For many years he was our primary designer, and he was responsible for a multitude of important projects.

Two new employees, long time friend and engineer Marc Rosenbaum and young architect Matt Coffey changed the complexion and orientation of the company as much as any two new people could possibly do. Solar and Deep Energy Retrofits began to drive the company as never before.

Small is beautiful

Before the layoffs, we had made big moves – furloughs, wage cuts, major marketing, new skill-building – to avoid them. But as we made our way through the evaluation process we came to realize that, for many reasons, we wanted to get smaller even if we didn’t absolutely have to.

We were not altogether unhappy that we had to change and we are glad that when forced by circumstances to do so, we were moved to tackle it vigorously, thoroughly, and as humanely as we could imagine. We were not proud of what we had to do, but we were proud of the process that led to it. It was wounding, wrenching, and heartbreaking – to ourselves as well as those who bore the brunt – but it was necessary.

We emerged from this period stronger, leaner, wiser, and with greater capacity than ever before – a bit worn out but excited about the future, ready for whatever may be in store, and working hard to chart a successful course.

In 2011 our efforts paid off. We hired Brice Delhougne, a French specialist in energy, heating, and ventilation. Aaron and Rocco became project leads (and Rocco became an Owner), giving us five project leads and the ability to do more projects of smaller size, which is what the market seemed to be offering. We began to restore the backlog. Energy began to soar. Some remarkable projects came in.

In 2012, when Massachusetts passed legislation allowing for Beneficial Corporations (companies which include positive impact on society, workers, the community and the environment in addition to profit as their legally defined goals), SMCo became one of the first ten B-Corps in the state.

We hired Greg Milne as our fourth architect and John Guadagno as PV Project Manager. We welcomed four new owners in 2012 – Rob Meyers, DonE Turnell, Aaron Beck, and Marc Rosenbaum – and we sadly accepted one BIG retirement: Michael Drezner, after 27 years, decided it was time to hang ‘em up. He was a huge part of the spirit of SMCo for all those years, and a great leader in our governance and financial accountability. Mike worked with me to establish our pension fund and our equity fund, and then he managed both in stellar fashion for many years. A truly remarkable colleague and friend, he epitomized what SMCo is all about.

We did a Deep Energy Retrofit on the 1930’s cottage at the Vagelos property, and at the same time did a large ground mount solar array to make the whole property a net energy producer.

Avalanche scenario and bottom lines

Siobhán took over management of our equity fund and pension after Michael retired and she began to create 25 year projections for the fund to ensure its long term solvency.

After 21 years here, many of those as an Owner, my son Pinto left to pursue his love of music. We hired Chris Wike, who has become our newest project lead, and Ian Gumpel, a young carpenter.

Among other projects, we completed the iconic Miller Barn project and a house for my daughter Sophie. We began the multi-faceted Sloan project, which would use a large part of our resources through 2014.

I completed the first version of our Avalanche Scenario (what happens tomorrow if I am swept away in an avalanche today) and we started seriously working more toward our gradual transition to the Second Generation.

Along with my friends Jamie Wolf and Paul Eldrenkamp, I started a new NESEA program called Building Energy Bottom Lines, which began with a bang with 30 companies from all around New England gathered into three peer-group networks dedicated to sharing triple bottom line business practices and learning together (now there are six groups and almost 60 companies).

Celebrating 40 and considering the next 40

In 2014, we formally adopted the Avalanche Scenario and the beginning of the Next 40 Plan. Architect Beth Kostman, became an Owner, and there were several major departures: Bob Julier retired after 21 years, Derrill Bazzy after 26, and Pete D’Angelo gave up his ownership and shifted to part time after 27 years. The following year, after Aaron Beck left to pursue his passion for blacksmithing, we made a string of important hires: Newell Isbell Shinn as Director of Production, Angie Francis as our fifth licensed architect, Abbie Zell as administrative assistant, and John Mazza as our new solar installation technician.

We held a wonderful party to celebrate our 40th anniversary in business and honored our trade partners, colleagues, and employees past and present.

Here Come The Young

In 2016, a gradual change of the guard began. Newell joined our Management Committee, and we welcomed four new owners – Curtis Friedman, Jean DaSilva, Brice Deloughne, and Matt Coffey – trending our leadership younger and more diverse.

Ryan Soushek was hired as an apprentice carpenter and Abbie Zell transitioned from Administrative Assistant to Communications Coordinator.

We held our first annual Day of Business in the fall of 2017. Our goals for the day were to inform, practice business literacy, celebrate each other’s contributions, build collective energy, and motivate specific actions. We piled into the MV Playhouse for a day of peer-led workshops. Eight hours later, we stumbled into the evening air feeling grateful and inspired.

Greg Milne and John Guadagno closed out the year as owners.

More new hires arrived in 2018: Donatas Zulkus as Architectural Draftsman and BIM Engineer (he works full time for us remotely from his home in Lithuania!), Rachel Wild as Production Administrator (helping Newell whose job continues to grow), and Ryan O’Malley, a recent MV Regional High School graduate, as Apprentice Carpenter.

But the truly big event of 2018 was Pete Ives’ retirement. Pete was hired in 1977, and aside from providing longtime heart and soul, was responsible for many of South Mountain’s signature projects during his 42-year tenure (most as a Project Lead). He was one of the three original SMCo owners when we transitioned to employee ownership in 1987. When it comes to the way-back-when old guard, I’m now the only one left standing.

The addition of Billy Dillon’s retirement (after 31 years) one year later marked five retirements since 2011 that collectively represented 150 years of SMCo employment.

Capacity Building

In 2019, we hired structural engineer Lin Gallant, to expand our in-house services. Mia Esparini and Faren Worthington came on board shortly after to solidify our Administration and Energy Technology departments. An exciting new class of future leaders emerged. One of them, Abbie Zell, became our youngest owner.

Our work branched out to include a consistent diet of impact-driven institutional work for island non-profits such as Camp Jabberwocky, MV Community Services, and Island Grown Initiative. In between, we flipped-the-switch on several off-grid homes.

At the November 2019 Day of Business, we unveiled our Next Generation Transition Plan in which I will retire at the end of 2022, and Deirdre Bohan will become our CEO in a first-among-equals arrangement with our four Department Directors – Ryan Bushey, Newell Isbell Shinn, Rob Meyers, and Siobhán Mullin.

And Today. . .

Here we are in our 48th year! I’m grateful to say that the company is healthy, vibrant, and vigorous.

Morale is good and these are exciting times.

Having survived (although hardly un-scathed) both the most troubling political times in our lifetimes and the greatest pandemic in a century, our economy is in a state of transition – from “the extractive economy of the past to the generative economy of the future,” as my friend Marjorie Kelly says.

During the pandemic we survived, prospered, changed, and grew. As we cared for the SMCo family financially and otherwise, we continued the steady march toward the Second Generation of the company’s life. We also built an extraordinary pipeline of outstanding work that will carry us for years to come.

We shored up architecture by hiring Courtney Duffey, we bolstered the field with Sebastian Hiatt and Chris Sterry, and we brought new life to the shop with the hiring of Nic Esposito and Ane Moeller, who returned after three years back home in Denmark.

The shop is preparing for longtime shop manager Jim Vercruysse’s retirement and rebounding from stalwart Ken Leuchtenmacher’s 2020 retirement.

DonE Turnell went into business for himself after 30 years at SMCo, as did mechanical engineer extraordinaire Marc Rosenbaum, Brice Delhougne and John Guadagno (all spend much of their time consulting for us). Angie Francis, Newell Isbell Shinn, and Chris Wike all became owners in 2020.

Abbie, Deirdre, and Siobhán invented the Path to Ownership, a cultural and professional journey that all new employees will embark on as they move toward ownership. The cycle continues.

Onward we go. . .

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15 Red Arrow Road
West Tisbury, MA 02575

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Post Office Box 1260
West Tisbury, MA 02575

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info@southmountain.com

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