
Company relocates -- keeps jobs in New Bedford
New Bedford manufacturer marks move to former
Arlan's store building
By Joe Cohen
Standard-Times staff writer
NEW BEDFORD — A 30-employee company that manufactures
exhaust systems for motor vehicles marked its move to
its new 30,000-square-foot home on Brook Street
Thursday.
Davico Manufacturing, which was started in the city in
1987 and now is a $5-million-a-year business, has
relocated all of its operations to a building at 95
Brook St. that at one time housed Arlan's Department
Store and later was used by Cliftex Mills.
Raymond P. Surprenant, owner and president, said he
purchased Davico from a relative in 2001, tripled its
sales and employees since then and now plans to double
its size again during the next five years.
In addressing the company's growth and need to move from
former quarters on Church Street where it had operated
for 18 years, Mr. Surprenant said he considered a range
of locations, including other states. He decided keeping
his trained work force was key and he narrowed his
search to a 20-mile radius of New Bedford.
As the process continued, Mr. Surprenant said, the New
Bedford Economic Development Council and Executive
Director Matthew A. Morrissey, along with a
Massachusetts work force training program, convinced him
to stay in New Bedford.
On Thursday, Davico conducted an open house to mark its
move to Brook Street, where it has been operating for a
month.
Bill Smith, operations manager, said Davico competes
against much larger manufacturers of custom-fit exhaust
pipe systems with attached catalytic converters.
The company succeeds in part because of two niches:
sales for limited production vehicles such as Land Rover
and Porsche, and being first to market with replacement
systems for more common vehicles. It sells only to
distributors.
Mr. Smith said Davico can custom-make a single unit and
rarely makes more than a small number of units, with 50
being a large order for a single model.
Davico employs "lean" or "just-in-time" manufacturing to
minimize material on hand, storage and waste, then ships
out finished product quickly so overhead costs are kept
low, Mr. Smith said.
Davico is able to make exhaust systems for 1,200 models
of cars and trucks.
Mr. Surprenant said motorists are keeping cars longer
because of the difficult economy, and that is a positive
for Davico's business in providing replacement parts.
Contact Joe Cohen at
jcohen@s-t.com
May 23, 2008
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