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Building Western New York Magazine Fall / Winter 2025

Page 1


Jillian Benedict

Joe Benedict

Colin Dabkowski

Jenn Van Dusen

Reagan Fredricks

AmyRae Nessa

Craig W Turner

DESIGN

Courtney Howe

Yellow Umbrella Creative, LLC

Colleen Cavanaugh

Haig Graphic Communications

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR’S REPORT

Hello Construction Exchange Members!

How does one even begin to describe the current state of the Western New York construction industry? Depending on the type of clients you work for, it’s either feast or famine

Many big project and affordable housing contractors have backlogs out a year and a half if not more. At the same time, private development and construction are still being dampened by high interest rates. Projects are continuing to be delayed, scaled back or dropped altogether.

At the same time, we ’ re seeing increased tension between state and federal government, continued material price increases and new state laws, such as the All-Electric Building Act that will prohibit buildings under seven stories from using fossil fuel energy sources come January 1, 2026.

There is also a bit of excitement internally at the Construction Exchange

JOE BENEDICT

Our Finance Manager, Darcy Baroudi, is retiring and our Plan Room Manager, Kristie Gerace, is leaving to go fulltime with her own business We wish them both the best but they leave big shoes to fill Lorri Ball has been hired to take over for Darcy and will fill the role well A well-managed plan room is critical to our members, so we are reorganizing to give this responsibility to our capable Membership Director, Amy Rae Nessa And our Building Western New York magazine that Kristie oversaw will now be the responsibility of our new communications manager who will also help us improve the way we communicate with you, our members.

In 2026 we will continue looking at ways to get better at what we do every day. Our team is constantly working to make sure our events, seminars, workforce development efforts, and membership benefits get better every year. We also keep an eye out for new opportunities to offer solutions to member challenges. Solutions like our retirement program for member companies to offer to their employees which is in its second year and we are currently evaluating a group health insurance option for members to take advantage of.

Good luck in 2026! Thank you for your membership!▪

Chairman

Dan Sarzynski Rupp Pfalzgraf LLC

Board of Governors

Vice Chairman

Doug Elia Montante Construction

Executive Director

Joe Benedict

Secretary / Treasurer

Lauren Chmielowiec Upstate Steel

Construction Exchange of Buffalo and Western New York

GOVERNORS

Omar Abdallah DV Brown and Associates

Michelle Ashby Tipping Point Communications

Kevin Biddle Mader Construction

Brad Buyers County Line Stone

Mercedes Calway RP Oak Hill Building Company

John Cleary

Campus Construction Management Group

Arnie Collier Iroquois Bar Corp.

Rob Coppola Lawley Insurance

Gary Coscia Largo Capital

Chris Gannon Grove Roofing

Stacy Gnacinski S E G Construction Inc

Amber Holycross Wendel Companies

Susanne Kelley Encorus Group

Joe Mannarino Buffalo Construction Consultants

Jim Panepinto Pinto Construction

Luis Rodriguez Rodriguez Construction

Sal Sciandra Frey Electric

Matt Sikora Turner Construction Company

Matt Squires Manning Squires Hennig

Anedda Trautman ERIE 1 BOCES

Michael Winderl LaBella Associates

1981-1987

Franklin D. Simpson*

Raymond E Kelley, Inc

1988-1989

Pat Casilio* Casilio Companies

1990-1991

George Schlemmer

Industrial Power & Lighting

1992

Melvin E. Rupp Jr.* Rupp Rental & Sales

1993-1994

Pat Sullivan

Scranton’s Thruway Builders Supplies

1995

Debra Malis

Grandview Construction

1996-1997

Jack Dumpert

Vanner Insurance Agency

1998-1999

Anthony Picone

Picone Construction Corp

2000-2001

Bill Besecker

Lovell Safety Management

2002-2003

Dave Shanley Volland Electric

*Deceased

of the Board of Governors Past Chairpersons

2004-2005

Lynn Wardour

Signal Construction

2006-2007

Michael Modrzynski

Allied Mechanical, Inc.

2008-2009

Kelly Besaw

Chaimpou Travis Besaw & Kershner, LLP

2010-2011

Michael Tylwalk First Niagara Risk Management

2012-2013

William K. Buscaglia, Jr. DeSpirt Mosaic & Marble Co , Inc

2014-2015

Joe Dommer

Baer & Associates

2016-2017

Gary Bichler

RP Oak Hill Building Company

2018-2019

Moira Moldenhauer

Dwight Moldenhauer, Inc.

2020-2021

Jim Keefe The Bonadio Group

2022-2023

Nicole Savage NW Contracting

The Unshakeable Foundation: The Power of Connecting with other Members

In the busy, deadline-driven world of construction, the quality of your work is undeniably important. But there’s another equally vital factor that often gets sidelined: the strength of your professional network.

For construction company owners, actively connecting with fellow contractors isn’t just a nice thing to do; it’s a smart business strategy. Building these relationships provides a solid foundation on which a resilient and sustainable business thrives Without them, tasks like finding new businesses, reducing risks, and keeping up with new innovations have become much harder

The construction industry is built on shared knowledge, trust, and strong relationships By shifting your focus slightly moving away from a mindset of pure competition and embracing the support of the construction community you unlock a competitive advantage that no single company can achieve alone.

Here are the key benefits that emerge from strong connections:

The Referral Engine: When another company is fully booked, specializes in a different area, or has a client with a project outside their scope, you want to be the first name they confidently recommend. Having a strong reputation within your network translates directly into a healthier project pipeline for your business.

De-Risking Large Projects: Connecting with owners of complementary firms perhaps a specialty trade or a contractor focused on a different region opens the door to strategic partnerships These collaborations let you confidently bid on and successfully complete projects that would be too complex or too large to tackle on your own

Accelerated Learning Curve: There's no need to spend time reinventing the wheel when you're implementing new software or a complex safety protocol. Chances are, someone in your network has already faced a similar issue and is happy to share how they solved it.

AMYRAE NESSA, DIRECTOR OF MEMBERSHIP & MARKETING

The "Sounding Board" Effect: Other companies in your network can offer honest, non-judgmental feedback on a difficult business decision like whether to take on a significant piece of debt or how to handle a complicated subcontractor relationship. Their outside perspective, informed by their own experience, is incredibly valuable for navigating risks and avoiding costly missteps.

Navigating Regulatory Change: Local, state, and federal regulations are often complex and frequently updated A connected network is a powerful source of collective knowledge, helping ensure you remain compliant and can quickly adjust your processes to new environmental or labor laws

For the construction company owner, the biggest, most important project is their business itself. A robust network provides the essential scaffolding, expertise, and support system to ensure that business stands strong for decades to come.

The Construction Exchange provides monthly networking and educational seminars for you to engage with like-minded members and build these vital relationships ▪

ConEx Workforce Services & Initiatives Update

Workforce development is a top priority for The Construction Exchange (ConEx), and our services, programs, and initiatives related to it, are therefore adapted or created to address member and industry needs This year, updates were made to both member and youth workforce services, and 2026 boasts new initiatives for each. Read on to learn about the details!

2025 Services Updates

1

The “Construction Careers” tab was added to the Construction Exchange’s website (Figure 1) This section of the site is designed to draw in local talent who are either, 1) exploring opportunities available to them in the industry or, 2) looking to apply for openings and begin their careers

The Career Explorer page (https://conexbuff com/careers) provides those investigating a career in construction with current industry workforce statistics and individual skilled trades “ career cards” (Figure 2) These cards outline the job duties, qualifications, training requirements and average salary, for thirteen of the in-demand trades. Each career card also provides direct links to the local training options available. A section dedicated to funding opportunities for such training and/or education is forthcoming.

The Job Board page (https://members conexbuff com/jobpostings) is the former CONEX Careers app, which was simply moved to a new URL Doing so, married the job board and the ConEx Membership Hub, ultimately streamlining the experience for member companies Now, rather than logging into a separate website to post open positions, companies can easily post while logged into their membership portal.

Figure

All positions posted through ConEx now appear on the Construction Exchange website “job board” (Figure 3) allowing jobseekers to view the expansive variety of available jobs within our membership.

Coming in 2026

The new year will bring a new workforce-related initiative for employers (R A D Employer Distinctions) as well as new opportunities for youth engagement (ACE Mentor Afterschool Program)

Construction Exchange member companies who excel at and demonstrate best practices in employee recruitment, retention and development (R.A.D) will be designated as a Construction Exchange “R.A.D Employer”. Best practices in these areas that have been successfully implemented by a given R A D Employer will be highlighted in ConEx newsletters and social media to raise awareness about prioritizing employee retention and development They will also be stored in a virtual resource library for those ConEx member companies striving to be R A D to utilize as they see fit

By drawing attention to the importance of recruitment, retention and development of talent, and providing resources to enhance companies’ current practices in these areas, ConEx members can begin to break the general misconceptions held about our industry, helping to better position ourselves in attracting future talent.

Starting in February 2026, youth in grades 9-12 attending the ACE (Architecture, Construction, Engineering) Afterschool program will have the opportunity to design, engineer, and build new benches and chairs for the dog park at The Plan Room Throughout this 15 week program, industry professionals will assist the students as they work to create the furniture, introducing them to the careers,

industry vocabulary, and various roles companies play in the construction industry. ACE is currently seeking any architects, engineers, and construction professionals interested in dedicating some of their time this spring to the program (please contact jvandusen@conexbuff.com).

The Construction Exchange continues to be a key player in shaping the future of the WNY construction workforce by connecting people to meaningful careers If you’d like to get involved in any of our workforce initiatives, please contact Jenn Van Dusen at jvandusen@conexbuff com ▪

Figure 3

McBride Animal Hospital

In an ideal world, construction projects would occur in a vacuum: no traffic, perfect weather, and every delivery on time But in the messy world of day-to-day construction, countless unpredictable variables threaten to throw things off-track In the process of constructing the sterling new McBride Animal Hospital facility in Tonawanda, Picone Construction encountered more than its share.

The company was tasked with building a major veterinary expansion while keeping the existing hospital fully operational for patients and their anxious owners. With the new building positioned directly behind the original facility at 629 Young Street, construction crews had to coordinate every delivery, excavation, and utility installation around the daily flow of animals, clients, and emergency cases that couldn't be interrupted

"This new facility was built to create a better workflow and for additional space, solving two major issues of the

a original facility," said John Burkhardt, VP/Sr Project Manager at Picone "The original facility had to remain operational throughout the project, and since the new building was situated behind the original building, access for both construction and daily operations needed to be harmonized so as not to disrupt their business."

The August 2025 completion delivered a facility that reflects veterinary medicine’s evolution into a technologyintensive field requiring specialized construction expertise and coordination among many trades.

McBride Animal Hospital is part of a larger practice that maintains AAHA (American Animal Hospital Association) accreditation, meeting over 900 rigorous standards covering pain management, patient care, team training, and medical record-keeping Only 14% of veterinary hospitals nationwide achieve this certification

Silvestri Architects handled design responsibilities while Picone Construction Corp managed the build. The Clarence-based contractor brought almost 95 years of commercial construction experience to the project, including major healthcare projects at Sisters of Charity Hospital and Roswell Park Cancer Institute

But no matter how much experience a construction company brings, new puzzles always need to be solved For this project, utility coordination quickly became an issue. Maintaining existing hospital power while installing new electrical service required multiple utility provider meetings and creative problem-solving that tested even Picone's experienced team.

"The main challenge was to build the new facility behind the existing building, since the business was fully operational during construction," Burkhardt explains "The hardest portion was getting the new utilities back to the new structure without disconnecting any of the existing We had to meet with the electrical company several times about having two services in operation on the property at the same time "

The challenge became even more complicated when the team discovered that upgrading to new service required relocating existing transformers. "To complicate matters, we had to have an upgraded electric service installed for the new build, but still leave the old service. This then created its own issue of the old service transformers needing to be relocated so the new transformers could be installed, and unfortunately, the old transformers also provided power to another facility down the road."

This cascade of infrastructure dependencies could have stopped the project cold Existing transformers served not just the hospital but a neighboring facility, meaning any power interruption would affect multiple businesses "It proved to be a challenge to coordinate with all the utilities providers, but we sorted it out," Burkhardt said.

The solution required extensive coordination among utility companies, careful sequencing of transformer installations, and temporary power arrangements to maintain service to all affected properties.

“The main challenge was to build the new facility behind the existing building, since the business was fully operational during construction.”
“As always, it can be a lot of work to coordinate with multiple subcontractors, but it is an essential aspect of commercial construction, and one we are very used to. After almost 95 years in the business, we've gotten the hang of a few things.”

For contractors considering similar projects, Burkhardt's experience highlights the importance of thorough utility investigation early in the planning process.

Modern veterinary facilities tax even the most experienced contractor coordinators. This project required more than 20 specialized subcontractors, each bringing its own requirements and schedules

For example, contemporary animal hospitals typically need HVAC systems delivering 15 to 20 air changes per hour with HEPA filtration and pressure differentials between areas to prevent cross-contamination Surgery suites require positive pressure systems, while boarding areas often need negative pressure to contain odors and pathogens.

Often, digital radiology capabilities demand lead-lined rooms, dedicated electrical systems, and network infrastructure supporting teleradiology services. Each system has to integrate seamlessly without disrupting the others.

"As always, it can be a lot of work to coordinate with multiple subcontractors, but it is an essential aspect of commercial construction, and one we are very used to," Chris Picone, VP of Operations, said "After almost 95 years in the business, we've gotten the hang of a few things "

Key trades included Bison Electrical handling the complex dual-service electrical installation, Innovative Mechanical Systems managing specialized HVAC requirements, and RJM Contracting & Plumbing addressing veterinary-specific plumbing and gas lines

An unexpected innovation emerged from the subcontractor team. "On this project, they did not want epoxy floors like they had in their original building. They wanted a product that was more cost-effective and easier to clean," Burkhardt said. "During another project of ours, a subcontractor recommended a product called Protect-All for a commercial kitchen space. That manufacturer also promotes its product for veterinary facilities. We suggested this to the owner and the architect for use on this project, and they decided to try it."

Two words describe the final vision Silvestri Architects settled on and Picone oversaw: clean and efficient

“We took their vision for the space and made it a reality while maintaining the schedule and budget for the build.”

Specialized materials were critical for veterinary operations The finished facility includes six examination rooms with dedicated surgery bay, X-ray room, and dental suite Multiple kennel areas for boarding, in-house laboratory and pharmacy capabilities, and employee amenities cover the full spectrum of veterinary practice needs

Completing the project on schedule and within budget came down to relationships built over years of collaboration. "In construction, there are always unknown challenges to overcome quickly to maintain the schedule. Having the trust of the owner and architect makes overcoming these challenges easier and helps reduce costs."

The completed facility positions McBride Animal Hospital competitively in Western New York's evolving veterinary market

Veterinary facilities present unique technical challenges that separate these projects from standard commercial construction Pet "humanization" drives demand for medical facilities that mirror human healthcare environments in cleanliness, comfort, and technological sophistication.

"We were pleased to see that the layout for the new building prioritized functionality," Burkhardt said. "For instance, all the exam rooms are interconnected to the spacious lobby area as well as the central treatment area located behind the exam rooms. This large space has oxygen lines and extensive storage for medical supplies, creating an island of floor-to-ceiling cabinets "

The treatment area layout follows modern veterinary workflow principles "There is a spacious feel, and the lack of actual walls in this area allows employees to interact easily during treatment Adjacent to the treatment area are the X-ray room, the surgery room, and the dental bay for ease of access. All of these areas also interconnect with several kennel areas."

Material selections balanced durability and visual appeal. The main lobby features herringbone-pattern ceramic tile flooring. Throughout the building, dark cabinetry provides storage while vinyl tile and rubber flooring handle the practical demands of veterinary work areas.

The McBride project proves how regional construction expertise can tackle complex technical requirements while rolling with the demands of an active business. Picone Construction's experience, combined with established subcontractor relationships and experience in healthcare facility construction, was essential for navigating multiple technical and logistical challenges

Industry trends show consolidation and service expansion often require additional space for specialty services, emergency care capabilities, or advanced diagnostic equipment

"Silvestri Architects was responsible for this fantastic design. We took their vision for the space and made it a reality while maintaining the schedule and budget for the build," Burkhardt said.

The project's success shows that veterinary facility construction, while presenting unique challenges from dual electrical services to specialized HVAC requirements, is manageable when you call in

professionals with the right experience

The project's success shows that veterinary facility construction, while presenting unique challenges from dual electrical services to specialized HVAC requirements, is manageable when you call in professionals with the right experience

Project Subcontractors

Electrical

Bison Electrical

2548 Elmwood Ave, Kenmore, NY 14217

HVAC

Innovative Mechanical Systems

623 Young St, Tonawanda, NY 14150

Plumbing

RJM Contracting & Plumbing

3002 Sunset Dr, Grand Island, NY 14072

Landscape

Beau Enterprises

4250 Williams Rd, Ransomville, NY 14131

Foundations and Flatwork

Brigham Concrete

PO Box 566 Richfield St, Lockport, NY 14095

Asbestos

Caysea Contracting

65 Allendale Rd, West Seneca, NY 14224

Final Cleaning

Cleanscapes LLC

11100 Transit Rd, East Amherst, NY 14051

Steel Door Frames

Door Specialties

530 Fillmore Ave, Tonawanda, NY 14150

Building Demolition and Removal

Economy Tree Service Inc DBA ETS Clearing & Grading

4159 Foxwood Ln, Buffalo, NY 14221

EIFS, Stone, Thin Brick

Elite Exterior

2022 Axemann Rd, Bellefonte, PA 16828

Flooring

Fairway Floor Covering

55 North Gates Ave, Lackawanna, NY 14218

Picone was just the outfit for the job Asked to reflect on what he was proudest of as he looks back on this project, Picone put it simply:

"Completing another project for an owner and architect who trust us "▪

Rough Carpentry

Genesee Lumber

76 Franklin St, PO Box 111, Batavia, NY 14021

Insulation

Home Insulation & Supply Inc

154 Cemetery Rd, Lancaster, NY 14086

Carpentry

MW Dylag Builders LLC

3693 Milestrip Rd, Buffalo, NY 14219

Wall Surfaces

Mandon Building Systems

84 Gunnville Rd, Lancaster, NY 14086

Steel Columns

Miller Welding

36467 Lake Rd, Union City, PA 16438

Painting

N Choops Painting

4804 Transit Rd, Bldg 7, Depew, NY 14043

Caulking

Niagara Sealant LLC 8425 Westphalinger Rd, East Amherst, NY 14051

Dumpster

Picket Fence

6695 Transit Rd, PO Box 757, East Amherst, NY 14051

Laminate Casework

Riverfront Custom Design

200 River Rd, North Tonawanda, NY 14120

Roof

Sahlem's Roofing

2260 Southwestern Blvd, West Seneca, NY 14224

Aluminum Entrances

Sterling Glass

1415 Niagara St, Buffalo, NY 14213

Excavation and Site Work

Visone Co

9829 Main St, Clarence, NY 14031

My Experience as a Student Member of NAWIC

If I could have known what would come out of applying to a scholarship quickly handed to me by my high school technology teacher, I probably would’ve laughed in disbelief. At 19 years old I can confidently say I have surpassed my goals and aspirations that I had set for myself and winning that scholarship that was handed to me a year ago was just the beginning of my journey.

It has almost been a full year since I have been a registered member of NAWIC in both Buffalo-Niagara and recently CNY What NAWIC has provided me with makes it seem like I have been a part of this association for multiple years now What the tremendous women in my chapter provided me with stretches far beyond what I could’ve ever dreamed of

My journey with NAWIC begins with the first time I set foot in a NAWIC meeting. I was lucky enough to have won a scholarship through the Buffalo-Niagara chapter for the past two years. So, my first time attending a chapter meeting was scholarship award night in 2024. Words cannot comprehend how nervous I was. Being a 17-year-old walking into a room full of successful women was far from easy for me. Not to mention, I wasn’t extremely familiar with the association and what they stood for. I may not have been the shortest person there, but I felt so small in that room I felt as though I didn’t deserve to be in a room with women who were so

poised, professional, and educated in comparison to myself. I hadn’t even graduated high school yet and still was figuring out if I really wanted to join the construction industry for sure. I had big plans to attend my dream university – Syracuse University – as an architecture student. But I felt as though I couldn’t compete or even compare to everyone I saw.

My parents didn’t leave my side the entire night and when I received my scholarship award, I was too scared to look at anyone but them Standing up in front of everyone felt so unnatural to me Little did I know how much my life was about to change I sat back down and all the sudden I was approached by a woman in the cutest blazer with bright blonde hair, Caryn Martin

Caryn was beyond excited to meet me as she was living and working outside both Buffalo and Syracuse, where I lived and where I was going to school. My once tense shoulders instantly eased when I found something in common with someone in the room. Caryn continued explaining how she would love to connect with me further and even possibly take me on a construction site and through a day in her life. In just a few minutes I felt as though I had somewhat belonged in the room. After exchanging contacts, I was approached by Marie Patton and many others with similar opportunities and conversations The event was soon over, and I walked

out with a smile and three more business cards that I thought I was going to get. When walking to the car my dad had said to me “I could see you being just like the women in that room ” . I had laughed and stopped for a second and all I said was “I can too”. After just a fast two hours, I already found a sense of belonging and what felt like a strong glimpse at what could be my future.

After the meeting concluded, I contacted a few of the women I met, and they couldn’t have responded any quicker. Their enthusiastic emails boosted my self confidence more than one might think. Before I knew it, I was at the new Bills Stadium with Caryn Martin walking around with a hard hat shaking the hands of so many influential people in Buffalo The next second I was at Assembly House 150 with Marie Paton meeting students and directors at University of Buffalo’s school of Architecture Not to mention the many lunches, phone calls, and meetings I had with so many women for advice and to just become more friendly with one another. Within just a month, I had an entire network of women who I would talk to on a regular basis regarding school, work, and just life in general. I had started to feel seen and heard for the first time.

I soon began school and instantly I was overwhelmed by the shear amount of work thrown onto my plate. People don’t tell you just how hard and an adjustment it will all be. Being away from home for the first time in my life in an area that felt so foreign to me was a change I wasn’t quite ready for as much as I had convinced myself I was (or tried to) With so much

going on all I had longed for was someone who felt at home and that is just what NAWIC provided me with. I had people constantly checking in on me and making sure I was adjusting well, people who had gone through all the new emotions that I was experiencing for the first time. With the help of so many amazing women, my first semester went by incredibly fast and soon enough it was already mid-second semester. I had plans to get dinner with Caryn Martin and I had mentioned how I was looking for an internship, and I swear I saw her entire face light up She mentioned so many wonderful opportunities where she thought I would be a great fit and grow as a person Soon enough I was committed to working at John W Danforth company for the summer Before I had even begun school, my one goal was to find an internship for the following Summer and hopefully grow my network and I can proudly say that I did that and so much more.

The summer began and quickly Buffalo’s Tap Takeover approached. I had been asked to attend by Marie as one of the scholarship winners and once again I had felt the same nerves that I had felt a year earlier. I still felt as though I didn’t quite compare to so many of the people I would be interacting with. Also, not to mention most of the people I would be chatting with, I would also be working with at Danforth just a few days after To say I was scared would be an understatement I walked in by myself and was greeted with so many smiles and people pulling me left and right to meet other people and suddenly I was placed in a circle with everyone that

worked for Danforth I think I may have said five words because I was so terrified of what they would think of me My confidence in myself was not always strong, especially with people I was not comfortable with

Quickly I learned that it doesn’t matter because people will get the nerves out of you quicker than they started. I met pretty much every single person (or so I thought) that I would be working with that following Monday and soon enough I was talking to Michelle Gerace and her husband for what must’ve been two hours. The event that made me so scared and insecure once again broke me out of my shell and started lifelong friendships. I went to work on Monday with familiar faces and newfound confidence in myself that I had never had all thanks to one NAWIC event and lots of talking On the first day of work when getting a tour of the office, I ran into Deanna Gokey who already knew my name You could say that I was slightly alarmed but she had looked right at me with the biggest smile on her face and said she had her amazing things about me through NAWIC. The ease I felt in that moment walking around the office with a few of my male coworkers was unmatched. I knew from that second that I was where I needed to be.

The summer was full of so much excitement and new opportunities. Every day I was learning and experiencing more than I could’ve ever imagined. I was surrounded by wonderful people and so many of the women who were around me every day made sure that I was always heard I never realized how male dominated the construction industry truly

I had no idea that the trailer I was standing in that day would soon be where I was working.

was until this past summer My eyes were opened to how a lot of women are perceived and even had the opportunity to talk to many women who were in my shoes not so long ago NAWIC has connected me with so many of these women who continue to inspire and push me to the best of my abilities, and I am beyond grateful for that every day The best part of it all was being able to share my journey at the end of the summer I had added a picture of me standing inside the Danforth trailer at the new Bills stadium just the year before. I explained it to everyone as “I had no idea that the trailer I was standing in that day would soon be where I was working”. The girl in that picture barely could comprehend the massive plan drawing that she was standing in front of. But the girl presenting in front of a team of presidents for a major company knew exactly what it all meant. She finally knew how to decipher the drawing and also what she wanted to do with her life and her passions. If that doesn’t explain how much I have grown and gained with NAWIC, I don’t know what I would I can truly say my life hasn’t been the same since joining NAWIC, and that is a positive statement

I am also lucky enough to be able to be apart from the newly opening CNY NAWIC chapter as well! After being approached by Stacy Miller at this year ’ s Buffalo-Niagara scholarship awards night, I am now involved in two chapters as well I hope to connect the association with more female students in design, architecture, and engineering. I was unaware of the benefits that could be gained from joining and hope to show other young women the opportunities and lifelong connections that could arise from such a strong and supportive group. As a member of the membership committee, I hope to help the chapter and Syracuse University connect with students and members to expand our involvement as much as possible. I also cannot wait to participate in more NAWIC events for the Buffalo-Niagara chapter and help expand the awareness back home too My dream would be for every young woman who has felt even an ounce of selfdoubt or discomfort in a male dominated industry to

have a strong support system. I hope to help provide so many with the beautiful opportunities that were presented to me.

NAWIC has truly been a life-changing experience for me I have found a support system and forever friends in every single woman that I have met Each one has touched my heart in more ways than I can say They truly understand you and I can say with pure certainty that there is always someone that can relate to you Whether the women is an official NAWIC member or not, every bit of insight that I have gained in the past year has truly shifted my projection and drive. I am an advocate for learning through others past experiences and this association has just solidified that even more for me. I have been provided with so many opportunities and new-found self-confidence that I use in more areas beyond a professional setting. NAWIC has been nothing short of incredible for me. I cannot wait to continue growing as a person and with the other incredible women around me My gratitude will never be hidden as I have never been prouder of myself and those who surround me ▪

Graycliff Conservatory

When LeChase Construction project superintendent Andrew Rankie strips the forms from Graycliff's board-formed concrete walls, he's looking for perfect wood grain impressions The tiniest nail holes and imperfections will show up in the finished surface, marring an otherwise perfect product with the traces of its creation.

"It's like building a fish tank," Rankie said, describing the self-consolidating concrete that flows like water into every crevice of the form work. "If you even have a small nail hole in any of your forms, it may just leak out "

Rankie and his LeChase Construction crew are creating the interior architectural centerpiece of a $4.3 million visitor center at Frank Lloyd Wright's Graycliff. It’s part of a broader preservation effort that demonstrates how paying close attention to material and design can reinvigorate a historic site without detracting from the landscape or architectural legacy.

Frank Lloyd Wright designed Graycliff in 1926 The estate

features architectural innovations that prefigured Fallingwater, his famous house built over a waterfall in Pennsylvania. The lakeside estate employs Wright's mature architectural philosophy with extensive cantilevered balconies, a transparent center pavilion, and the integration of indigenous materials like limestone found at the edge of Lake Erie.

Wright often insisted on using local materials, believing stone was "the only true building material." His integration of indigenous elements, including stucco mixed with local beach sand from the Lake Erie shore, established a material philosophy that influenced today's visitor center construction. The estate served as the summer home for Darwin and Isabelle Martin from 1928 until the mid-1940s It remained vacant for several years until it was sold to a Hungarian religious order that owned the property for nearly 50 years

Technical Challenges and Solutions

Last November, when LeChase broke ground on the lakeside bluff, Graycliff Executive Director Anna Kaplan understood the assignment "This was a real architectural challenge," she said during a February 20 webinar about the project "How do you design something that is in reverence to Wright's vision but doesn't overwhelm it or overshadow it?"

To answer this question, Buffalo's HHL Architects and Brooklyn-based SITU Studio came up with a plan to transform a 1950s concrete block gymnasium into a sophisticated visitor center The adaptive reuse project nearly triples the facility's footprint from 1,600 to 4,400 square feet while maintaining visual deference to Wright's masterpiece.

For the crew, the architectural vision led them to a technically demanding concrete construction challenge that LeChase embraced.

"Those are the most complex walls you're going to find in the city of Buffalo," said Joseph Akel, a LeChase project manager "They're very one-off I've never even seen them designed and constructed this way before "

The walls use self-consolidating concrete (SCC), a specialty mix that behaves more like liquid than traditional concrete Where regular concrete needs vibration to settle properly, SCC flows on its own, taking the exact impression of whatever it touches.

"The self-consolidating concrete mimics what it's poured against more than regular concrete because it's so watery," Rankie explains. The flowing concrete captures every detail of specially sandblasted form boards, integrating natural materials and new construction techniques in a way Wright might have admired.

The process required LeChase to master dual-pour techniques First, crews pour an eight-inch structural wall, then adhere four-inch foam insulation using specialized anchor systems The second pour creates the architectural face visitors will see

The challenge: the form work for that second pour had to be installed while the wall was horizontal. "We had to do all the layout on the ground, not in place," Rankie said. "Which is very difficult."

The crew rolled with the punches of Buffalo winters and improvised through it. "We've had as much as three feet of snow on site at different times," Akel said

The crew used temporary enclosures made from poly sheeting and scaffolding to keep work progressing through harsh months

The timing was strategic. Graycliff closed to visitors in November, giving LeChase a window for disruptive work before tours resumed in March.

Specialized Construction Techniques

LeChase's decision to self-perform the specialized concrete work proved crucial for quality control "We have the ability to call our own guys in, get our own materials, and do it ourselves," Akel said. "If we needed more men, if we need to take something down and fix it, it was all self-controlled."

This approach particularly benefits architectural concrete where tolerances are often measured in millimeters. "When you're doing something that's so much more like an architectural piece, you're striving for perfection," Akel said.

The building's signature feature—a dramatically cantilevered wooden soffit extending from interior to exterior represents

Contractors

General Contractor: LeChase Construction

Architect of Record: HHL Architects

Design Architect: SITU Studio

Landscape Architecture: Bayer Landscape Architecture

Owner: Graycliff Conservancy

another technical puzzle that echoes Wright's own use of cantilevers throughout Graycliff's historic structures The continuous ceiling system requires precise coordination between structural steel placement and wood installation

"You've got to figure out the soffit heights, the details, the heights of the materials so they tie in," Akel explains. The cantilever includes a built-in gutter system wrapped around the building perimeter, then transitions to an angled radius creating the building's signature lifted roof profile.

Perhaps the most subtle technical achievement involves the continuous flooring system. Interior and exterior surfaces use identical aggregate mixtures but different finishing techniques polished inside, exposed aggregate outside to blur the boundary between spaces

"The challenge was finding concrete mixes," Akel said "Interior and exterior mix is different for different applications, different chemical properties, but same aggregate."

This required careful control during the pour. Over-vibrate the concrete, and the aggregate sinks to the bottom, ruining the exposed aggregate finish planned for months later.

"You're not just thinking two steps ahead," Akel said. "You're thinking seven, eight, nine, ten steps ahead."

Design Philosophy and Project Impact

The visitor center preserves the existing concrete block structure built by the Piarist Fathers This adaptive reuse approach maintains historical continuity while demonstrating sustainable construction practices

"We're not demolishing and losing all of that useful material, but trying to creatively reuse it," Basar Girit, a partner at SITU Studio, said during the Feb. 20 webinar. The design intentionally leaves some original cinder block exposed as "a touchpoint to the fathers," Kaplan noted in the presentation.

For Kaplan, the project addresses major operational challenges. Before construction, space for events at Graycliff was practically nonexistent. Tours started in a

cramped hallway near the restroom, with no view of the historic houses visitors were about to see

"Before this building, we had no interior space for programming," Kaplan said All programming happened outside on the grounds, "which was great, except when the weather doesn't cooperate."

The new facility includes expanded retail space "our second largest earned revenue stream" flexible event areas, and a pantry kitchen designed to support year-round operations. The enhanced programming options include everything from casual coffee meetings to formal board presentations.

The collaboration between HHL Architects and SITU Studio created what architect Basar Girit called "agile and adaptable" spaces that "blur the distinction between indoors and out ”

"We decided to team up with some new and talented firms," Matt Meier from HHL said. The partnership brought both local construction knowledge and international design thinking to address a challenge that few construction projects face: building contemporary structures adjacent to architectural masterpieces.

The challenge isn't unique to Graycliff. Toshiko Mori's acclaimed Eleanor and Wilson Greatbatch Pavilion at Buffalo's Darwin D Martin House demonstrates how contemporary additions can enhance Wright properties through what Mori calls "dialogue through contrast" where modern design responds to Wright's original through complementary opposition rather than imitation Similarly, Fallingwater's visitor center, positioned a quarter mile from Wright's famous house, succeeds by remaining virtually invisible from the historic structure.

These precedents informed Graycliff's approach. The visitor center's materials palette references Wright's philosophy while remaining distinctly modern. Board-formed concrete walls, wood

ceilings, and steel structure echo Wright's material preferences without mimicking his designs.

"The choice of materials was very intentional," Kaplan said "When you look at all the materials together, there's nothing crazy opulent it's concrete, it's wood, it's steel Same with the house: it's stucco, wood "

The success of contemporary additions to Wright sites depends on what preservation professionals call "compatible but distinct" approaches a philosophy requiring sophisticated understanding of Wright's architectural principles rather than stylistic mimicry.

Craftsmanship and Legacy

For Andrew Rankie, the project represents both professional challenge and responsibility to architectural legacy The board-formed concrete technique requires particular attention during pours where anything but obsessive, microscopic attention to detail will “totally screw up all the concrete "

One careless moment can ruin an entire section. The concrete "wants to be as homogeneous as possible," but improper vibration settles aggregate at the bottom, destroying the surface finish planned for months later.

The visitor center opens in 2026 for Graycliff's centennial celebration—100 years since Wright first designed the estate for Darwin and Isabelle Martin

"We fully expect to open our new facilities to the public in time for the centennial anniversary of the project," Kaplan said during the webinar

For Andrew Rankie, the work represents continuation of Buffalo's architectural legacy. When complete, the center will stand as proof that it’s possible for modern craftsmen to honor architectural heritage while building for the future.

"You don't get too many buildings like this," Akel said. "You really get to have some creativity from a design perspective." ▪

Montante Expands Graham’s Military Manufacturing

When traveling west on I-90, you may venture to a small town called Batavia There, you can try your luck at the casino Maybe go back in time at a museum. Or see the Muckdogs in action. Perhaps you want to get in touch with nature. After all, it’s a classic upstate hometown with a little bit of everything a walkable downtown, old-school candy shops, historic architecture and plenty of green space to roam and relax.

But what most visitors don’t realize is that tucked away on Florence Avenue, materials are being manufactured for the U S military a surprising twist in an otherwise quiet community

Graham Corporation, which specializes in providing critical equipment for national defense, is headquartered a mere three-plus miles from the quaint Genesee County Fairgrounds With a focus on propulsion system heat exchange components for

An aerial view of Columbia Accelerating –Building 14, Graham Corporation’s newest building in Batavia.

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naval vessels, what’s manufactured at Graham’s Batavia site includes steam surface condensers, shell and tube heat exchangers and steam jet air ejectors.

It’s at this location that Montante Construction got to work on Graham Corporation’s newest building, as the company wanted to expand its manufacturing capabilities. The project was known as “Columbia Accelerating – Building 14,” and was developed to deliver orders for the U S Navy

Conor McInerney, Construction Consultant and Owner’s Representative from Ciurzynski Consulting, said the project had ample support from the Genesee County Economic Development Center (GCEDC) It also received some financial assistance through tax abatements Columbia Accelerating –Building 14 also created 24 full-time equivalent jobs.

Image provided by Montante Construction

And while the use of the products manufactured within the building is classified, thankfully, the details surrounding this construction project were not

Building 14 is approximately 250 feet long by 116 feet wide, with a gross area of approximately 29,000 square feet. Inside, the majority of the space is dedicated to manufacturing and is equipped with two 20-ton overhead bridge cranes. Additionally, there is a smaller quality control and clean weld area served by a third 20-ton overhead bridge crane. Other amenities include a supply room, canteen, bathrooms, a mezzanine and a utility room.

The main fabrication high-bay contains the milling equipment on the south end, with manual and automatic weld stations in the north end In a separate low-bay area, there is an isolated clean welding room

“The construction itself was fairly straightforward We worked with Montante, who hit the ground running with this out of the gate, pulling permits and aligning contracts, ensuring a smooth process without hiccups,” McInerney said.

Joshua Henderson, Senior Project Manager at Montante Construction, said because it was both a design-build and a governmental project, he had the pleasure of wearing several hats on the job site,

Montante Construction gave careful consideration to the design of the building, which was developed to deliver orders for the U.S. Navy.

�� Image provided by Montante Construction

Fully

customized workstations surround the floor where large equipment is housed in the heart of Building

14.

�� Image provided by Montante Construction

acting as general contractor, as well as overseeing structural, mechanical, electrical, plumbing, fire alarm and fire suppression design

Henderson said the difference was in the details when it came to the design of the interior

“We wanted to maximize the space they had and customize it to fit their needs It needed to be smooth, it needed to be streamlined and it needed to be safe,” he said, noting this was no small task, since they were incorporating several work stations around large equipment in a very tight space.

“It was a ton of effort and coordination with the client and the architect to give them exactly what they wanted, and they’ve never had that before. They’ve always had to retrofit the space they were given,” he explained.

The team at Montante built 12 individual welding workstations around the floor that houses three big machines

“We really tried to maximize not just their space, but their safety, too,” Henderson said, noting they added heavy-grade metal panels to the wall to fasten all their connections and get the cords off the ground and out of the way “Now they have walls to use for all their equipment, and that increases their working area tenfold,” he said.

Graham employees can take a break from their busy days in the newly built canteen.
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This tailored service for a state-of-the-art design-build is just another day in the life of Henderson. However, the prep work that was needed for the installation of the cranes and other machinery was another aspect of the job that also took some careful planning.

“By the time this machinery is fully assembled, they get into the 200,000-ton range, ” he said.

Henderson explained that different foundations were needed to accommodate the million-dollar-plus equipment pieces, including a two-foot-recessed, sixfoot-deep foundation with multiple anchor points for one machine; a six-foot-deep, isolated vibration foundation for another; and a multi-level foundation for the last. Each foundation measured roughly 25 by 45 feet in size.

McInerney said with the teams ready to go, they were able to get a jump on the project last fall, before the winter months. This gave enough time to get the roof up and secure, so they could continue to work inside without having to worry about the outside conditions.

“We worked with Montante to quickly get out on the ground last fall before winter really set in, and that guaranteed our schedule,” he said

Image provided by Montante Construction

Henderson agreed that the teams were pleased with the timeline and outcome of the project, and said the words every business owner loves to hear.

A mezzanine was built to accommodate a conference room in the future. �� Image provided by Montante Construction

“We actually accelerated the overall project timeline,” he said. “We finished under budget and about a month ahead of schedule, so it was an extremely successful project.”

MAUSOLEUM Legacy

In the summer of 1992, an 18-year-old Frank Ciminelli II was crawling through hot concrete crypts at Mount Calvary Cemetery in Cheektowaga, hunting for plastic vent pipes buried in fresh pours

"Being the kid with the right last name, they gave me the crap job," Ciminelli, now president and founder of Arc Building Partners, said of his first summer working for his father's company. "My job was to go in there between eight and 16 feet deep into a crypt, trying to find this little plug... in July and August, concrete's still hot while it's curing."

The 18-year-old would squeeze into the narrow spaces where older workers hesitated to go, or couldn't fit His job: locate the small plastic tubes that allow offgassing from bodies in the mausoleum crypts, tubes that often shifted during concrete pours and needed to be uncapped before the granite facing could be installed "You'd smell like concrete dust and your eyes would be coming to adjustment, going in and out," Ciminelli said.

Today, at 51, Ciminelli stands at the eastern edge of Forest Lawn Cemetery, where he's managing a $3 million mausoleum project for Arc. It's a different cemetery, but the same specialized work that launched his construction career

“ From a concrete contractor standpoint, there’s nothing more production-driven than a cast-in-place mausoleum.

The new community mausoleum under construction at Forest Lawn Cemetery will be the institution's sixth such structure. The garden-style building will house 384 crypts for casket burials and 400 niches for cremated remains.

The project required Ciminelli to "send up the bat signal" to assemble a team capable of specialized work that doesn't come along often

"From a concrete contractor standpoint, there's nothing more production-driven than a cast-inplace mausoleum," Ciminelli said

There’s a handful of niche mausoleum builders that will literally travel the country doing this stuff.

Most mausoleum work goes to national specialists. "There's a handful of niche mausoleum builders that will literally travel the country doing this stuff," Ciminelli said These crews move from project to project, often leaving construction sites idle between visits

But Forest Lawn CEO Julie Snyder wanted to explore a local approach. When she mentioned the project to Frank and Cynthia Ciminelli at a social gathering, his family history with the cemetery came up.

"We'd love to talk to you about it," Ciminelli said, acknowledging that Arc didn't have the resources to execute the project in-house but knew exactly where to find them

Project Executive Vincent Kirsch has worked with many of the crew members on previous mausoleums "All my local lead guys are former LP Ciminelli employees who worked on several mausoleums," he said, referring to Arc's predecessor.

The project drew veterans like Andy Kubiak and Mark Bagovich out of retirement. "These guys are a handful of the old guards, including guys who have employee numbers that were like single digits going back to my grandfather," Ciminelli said

some celestial acoustic guitar. The ceiling also acts as a container for electrical and ductwork cleverly out of our reach ”

"We can't ask anybody to do something we haven't done ourselves," Cynthia Ciminelli said "You lead by example."

Precision Work

The technical demands of a cast-in-place concrete building leave no room for the field adjustments common in other building projects. Unlike more forgiving wood-frame projects, granite facing fabricated in India has to align perfectly with anchor bolts embedded in concrete

"Those things have to be plus or minus a half an inch," Kirsch said, pointing to bolts protruding from the concrete forms "When you go to bolt those faces on, because those come out true square... there's no adjusting them when they get here."

That approach would have stretched the project timeline from Arc's projected six to eight months to potentially two years.

"The idea both on the timing and the bid, as well as the opportunity to have a local firm with local subs carried with it what our leadership team all agreed on would be a much higher commitment to quality," Snyder says The local approach simplified logistics "Normally we deal with 15 to 25 subcontractors and this one's eight," Kirsch said "Just because concrete's such a single trade focus "

A History of Innovation

Forest Lawn's journey into mausoleum construction began in 1972 with the Oakwood Mausoleum, part of a broader shift in American burial practices. The cemetery has since built steadily: Birchwood in 1976, Rosewood in 1980, the Rosewood Atrium in 1990, and the unique Blue Sky Mausoleum in 2004 the only funerary design by architect Frank Lloyd Wright

The evolution reflects changing attitudes toward above-ground burial As New Orleans architect Tom Bissell told The Buffalo News in 1992, early mausoleums were "really just a closet full of shelves" with flat roofs and utilitarian design. But by the 1990s, cemetery architects were pushing boundaries.

"The cemetery business is a very slow-moving business," Bissell said at the time, but the drive for more appealing spaces led to dramatic innovations Forest Lawn's Rosewood Atrium, completed in 1990, featured landscaped atriums with trees, park benches, and even a birdbath—"one of the most tasteful and timeless burial places in the area," according to local historians.

The current Legacy Mausoleum represents the latest evolution in this thinking. Unlike enclosed structures, the garden-style approach emerged from practical considerations: space efficiency and maintenance costs, combined with Buffalo's

climate suitability for outdoor structures.

"Space in every cemetery is extremely precious," Mount Calvary Cemetery president Robert A. Wutz Jr. told The Buffalo News in 1992, explaining the rationale that drives mausoleum construction. As Forest Lawn's Don Hamm-Johnson noted at the time, "Cemeteries build mausoleums to extend the life of the cemetery As cemeteries use up space, we're going to have to do more with mausoleums and cremations "

Design for Function

The garden mausoleum design addresses both practical and aesthetic needs. Unlike Forest Lawn's four existing enclosed mausoleums with heating and air conditioning, the new structure remains open to the elements while providing covered walkways.

"You'll walk around the perimeter of it," Kirsch said, describing the cantilever design that extends eight to ten feet from supporting columns "All the crypts and niches are on the outside, everything's outward facing "

The approach proves "more cost effective to build and a lot cheaper to maintain" while creating sight lines that connect visitors to the cemetery's landscape.

Architectural details reference the cemetery's heritage while embracing simpler aesthetics. The facade mirrors elements of the Margaret L Wendt Archive and Resource Center Classic gray granite, common throughout Forest Lawn's historic sections, frames the structure

"We went with a predominant look and feel of the gray, classic gray granite," Snyder said. "The advantage of that is it compliments and doesn't compete with the landscape around it."

Space in every cemetery is extremely precious.

The current project addresses growing demand for above-ground burial options. "About 70% of our business are people that come to us making a plan," Snyder notessaid, referring to pre-need customers who arrange their burials while healthy.

The first question Forest Lawn asks: "Do you want to be above ground or below ground? People have very distinct ideas about that "

The current community mausoleums are "either full or fully sold," creating demand for additional space "The pricing for mausoleum crypts and niches is all about sight line," Snyder said. "The ones at eye level always cost more versus the ones up high."

Pre-sales will begin once the structure reaches the halfway point, with at least 25 to 30 people already expressing interest since the project's start.

Buffalo Connections

The project connects multiple threads of Buffalo's construction and cultural history Kirsch spent a decade working on the Darwin D Martin House, learning to replicate Frank Lloyd Wright's specifications where "everything had to be duplicated and if there's a variation you had to justify it."

The team also worked on the Albright-Knox Art Gallery expansion, collaborating with renowned artist Olafur Eliasson on installation details that required a trip to Quebec City to study his techniques

"I think our ethos and our value proposition kind of fits well with cultural institutions," Ciminelli said of Arc's relationship with Buffalo's landmark organizations.

For Kirsch, who grew up in Buffalo's construction industry, the Forest Lawn project represents both professional challenge and community service. "I would hate to see somebody come in from out of town," Ciminelli said "We live in the city and that would've hurt "

The mausoleum's completion coincides with Forest Lawn's 175th anniversary, a milestone that required careful balance between celebration and ongoing operations. "For an active cemetery, meaning we have burials, entombments, interments here every day, how much of this space should be used for things other than our core business?" Snyder said of the careful balance she needed to strike over the past 18 months

The anniversary year featured events ranging from community festivals to the unveiling of a Julia Bottoms bronze statue honoring Shirley Chisholm But the mausoleum represents the most tangible legacy project, designed to serve the community for generations.

Planning began five years ago, with cemetery leadership visiting garden mausoleums across the country and working with a Texas architecture firm that specializes in cemetery construction The site includes foundation space for a mirror-image second building to the west, should demand warrant expansion

As concrete trucks arrive for another precisely timed pour, Ciminelli watches the choreographed work that he first witnessed as a teenager at Mount Calvary. The crew maintains the rhythm he learned decades ago: "Pour day guys coming in for the afternoons, laborers and carpenters all day, iron workers in and out, cement finishers only on the day of the pour " "It was literally a well-oiled machine," he said of those early experiences "Really neat to watch and kind of eye-opening because I'd never been on a job site before "

Now he oversees that same precision, managing a structure designed to last centuries. The teenager who once crawled through crypts hunting for vent pipes has returned to build something permanent.

"Everything we do is the first time it's ever been done" under these specific circumstances, Ciminelli said as he watched his crew prepare for another pour in the July heat "There's always something different that requires a lot more planning because you can't take anything for granted " ▪

Project Subcontractors

General Contractor:

ARC Building Partners, LLC

Architecture:

JST Architects

Subcontractors:

Sutton Paving & Excavation Inc

Sterling Glass, Inc

Sahlem's Roofing & Siding Inc

R W Painting, Inc

Old Dutchman's Wrought Iron Inc.

Napier and Sons, Inc.

Michael Serafini Inc

Hertel Hardware & Plumbing Supply Co Inc

Greenman-Pedersen, Inc

CVM Electric, Inc.

Architectural Stone Imports Inc

Forest Lawn Cemetery Group provided project oversight and coordination.

An in Energy Savings

Inside the walls of Lakeshore School District, students are hard at work, preparing for their future Now, thanks to Montante Solar, the high school’s rooftop is doing its part too, capturing sunlight to support the next generation, and the district is reaping the benefits

Steve Erck, Vice President at Montante Solar, said the Lakeshore School District solar project was three years in the planning process, yet needed just a handful of months to complete.

“It takes a few years to woo the districts over and then get approval from local and state agencies before the physical work can begin,” he said

Erck’s colleague, Zoë Knauss, Business Development Manager at Montante Solar, said initial planning for a district looks at where power is currently coming from

“There are certain geographies served by National Grid that are more feasible for solar interconnections than others. Districts that fall into those zones are quickly greenlighted,” she said. “Lakeshore’s utility interconnection fell into this zone, so it was deemed a go. ”

With the panels set up on roughly two-thirds of the roof, the team worked around factors like numerous roof elevation changes and multiple loading points, while still providing space for future district rooftop equipment

“Despite the logistics, we worked hand in hand with the building’s operations team to ensure a seamless, lowimpact installation,” Erck said

At the time of publication, the system had not yet been activated, but Erck was pleased with the installation timing.

Rian Buzzard of Montante Solar torques and marks fasteners while installing solar panels atop Lakeshore High School. �� Montante Solar

“We started procurement in the spring, shortly after receiving approval from the State Education Department and the school district, and construction on site began just after the Fourth of July [By September] we were done installing all the materials, and it’s scheduled to be turned on this fall,” he said.

He noted that it was important to begin the work while students were on summer break in order to cause as little disruption as possible.

“All of the heavy lifting was scheduled to be completed when the students were not in the building because it involves cranes and lifts to get everything to the roof,” he said

Joe Mauger, Vice President of JM&R Electric, a subcontractor to Montante, said while this was a relatively standard project for his team, the school district did have some unique user requirements that went above and beyond minimum code requirements

“They didn’t want to see any equipment or conduit on the side of the building facing the road. And, of course, they already had some big equipment there. So we had to move everything off to the side and take a more

scenic route than maybe was most efficient,” he said

Taking the scenic route proved to be less cumbersome than initially thought, though, according to Mauger.

“The only thing we had to be aware of was existing underground utilities. In order to move our equipment off to the side, we had to bury the conduit to tie into the utility. We just had to be aware of any lighting circuits and fiber lines, as well as the existing utility. We had to tie into that without exploding it,” he said.

Erck added that the team accommodated other requests of the district, specifically around material choices

“They wanted metal materials used in lieu of plastic for conduit and wireway, which is a smart request for two reasons First, PVC conduit tends to sag over time due to the heat it sees on a roof, particularly a black one like in this case Our standard practice is to upgrade to a thicker wall conduit and tighten up support spacing to minimize this issue, but using metal is even better. Second reason is Lakeshore is right in the lake effect snow belt, so the sturdier materials will stand up better to the feet upon feet of snow they regularly get.”

The sun rises on a new beginning of efficiency for the Lakeshore School District. �� Montante Solar

...Lakeshore is right in the lake effect snow belt, so the sturdier materials will stand up better to the feet upon feet of snow they regularly get.

In September, the team put the finishing touches on its work. As of press time, final inspections had been scheduled, excess materials were being removed from the site, and the energization process was underway with the utility When activated, the district is expected to see significant savings, despite having solar on just one of its buildings

“We looked at [the district’s] multiple school buildings and land-sited projects, but for a variety of different reasons, only one of [the buildings] actually worked,” Erck said. “Between structural limitations of the buildings themselves and capacity constraints of the utility-owned power lines, we unfortunately were only able to put an array on this one building.”

He said Lakeshore Central School District’s High School solar project consists of 672 panels with a total capacity of 400 kilowatts. A system of this size produces about 440,000 kilowatt-hours per year, which has an

electricity value of nearly $50,000 annually and reduces the district’s carbon emissions by roughly 628,000 pounds per year

“That’s a pretty meaningfully size array The district can expect to receive, conservatively speaking, about $45,000 to $50,000 per year in utility bill credits,” Knauss said “And with electricity rates expected to increase in the coming years, that value will also increase ”

Despite the system not entirely replacing the school’s electrical needs, these savings are still achieved.

“It’s not solar independence; they are still tied to the grid, so they will be generating during the day, and anything above and beyond will be sent back into the grid, and they’ll get a credit,” explained Mauger.

“The savings are incredible. Plus, school districts get reimbursements from the state for these projects Between

Montante Solar installed 672 panels on the rooftop of Lakeshore High School, generating 400 kilowatts of clean energy. �� Montante Solar

the state solar incentives, federal tax credits, and the school district state aid, these projects are a great deal for schools,” Erck said

Montante Solar has installed solar arrays on more than 20 different school buildings throughout Western New York and is well-acquainted with this environment.

“General interest is up, especially as the electricity rates are going up and school districts are becoming more expensive to operate,” Knauss said.

While NYSERDA doesn’t have exact figures on how many school districts in the state utilize solar energy, the team at Montante knows it could be significantly higher

“We hope to see more and more schools doing it,” Erck said “We’ll be along for the ride ” ▪

Metal conduit was used to withstand the harsh conditions faced by a school located in the lake effect snow belt.
�� Montante Solar

Laying the Groundwork for Milk-Bone’s Future in Buffalo

How many of us ever spend time thinking about how important the floor is?

This isn’t a philosophical question – as in, we’d all be floating around – but in fact a very practical one. Do you ever look at the floor beneath your feet and contemplate what went into putting it there?

The team at Millennium Construction? They spend a great deal of time thinking about floors Which is how they became a go-to resource for manufacturing flooring in Western New York

It’s easy to understand that the complexities of flooring in a manufacturing plant are more substantial than your everyday run-of-the-mill floors. But, one of Millennium’s most recent projects put even their expertise, creativity and ability to deal with surprises to the test: a pivotal flooring component of Milk-Bone’s $53 million modernization of their 125-year-old plant on Buffalo’s East Side.

The Project

The Milk-Bone manufacturing facility on Urban Street in Buffalo was originally constructed in 1900 and has been used for dog treat production since 1925 (under Milk-Bone’s ownership and operation since 1957). One hundred years later, the facility is undergoing a comprehensive renovation to boost capacity and efficiency amid rising demand for pet treats – a project that is expected to be completed by spring 2027

A key early component of this forward-thinking renovation was a 30,000+ square-foot flooring overhaul on multiple levels of the plant, led by

Millennium Construction Inc. (MCI). This extensive epoxy flooring project not only future-proofed the factory’s infrastructure but also contributed to one of the largest private investments in history on Buffalo’s East Side, helping secure local jobs and future growth

So… A 125-year-old building that’s still being used to produce dog treats?

Replace the 2nd and 4th floors while minimizing the impact on food production – both from a cleanliness and operating perspective? What’s so hard about that?

Let’s dig in before we answer that… Literally.

Challenge #1: The Wood

MCI was selected by J M Smucker's / Milk-Bone as the contractor of choice, demonstrating that they were able to provide the value, experience and manpower necessary to successfully complete the complex project. Turns out, as they learned when the project kicked off in May 2025, creativity and flexibility were also necessary attributes – and MCI was up to the task.

The process began with extensive demolition. On the fourth floor alone, more than 17,000 square feet of old wood flooring were demolished and removed. Removing this thick wood flooring on an upper level presented a unique challenge that was just the start

“While removing tile and grinding concrete is common in the resinous flooring trade, it's rare to remove wood flooring, especially from the 4th floor,” said John Adamo, Millennium’s project manager on this job

“Then, to have to logistically plan to get the materials safely to the first floor for removal and disposal was a massive challenge that we were able to set our most creative minds to solve.”

On the second floor, which came with its own challenges, aging vinyl composition tile (VCT) was stripped out and the underlying concrete was mechanically ground using high-powered, HEPAfiltered equipment to control dust This meticulous surface preparation ensured the substrate was clean and profiled for the new epoxy floor system

Challenge #2: The Hole

After the wood was torn out, the crew was surprised to discover a roughly 4-inch void across nearly 30,000 sq. ft. that needed to be filled to bring the floor up to the proper level. Rather than using conventional concrete, MCI opted to fill this cavity with a 100% solids epoxy mortar system for superior strength and durability. The team first applied a wet primer to the exposed substrate, then began the massive task of mixing and placing epoxy mortar to fill the entire expanse.

Executing this phase required careful planning and an almost assembly-line approach MCI staged all materials and specialty mixing equipment on the fourth floor, setting up multiple mixing stations and material transport routes Crews were rotated strategically between mixing, hauling, pouring, and finishing to maintain a steady, 24-hour work cycle

“A memorable turning point was coming up with the formula for success that allowed our crews to systematically place the mortar efficiently,” said Tom Cefalu, Millennium’s COO. “It was these processes that kept everyone fresh and productive and the project rolling through shift rotations.”

MCI leadership dubbed the operation “ a well-oiled engineering machine,” as their team worked in double shifts for three weeks straight to place more than three thousand batches of epoxy mortar and rebuild the floor It took some trial-and-error to get the process right, but eventually they hit their stride

Once the thick mortar underlayment cured, the final step was installing a high-build epoxy topcoat over the entire area. The result: a seamless, heavy-duty resinous floor built to withstand the rigors of industrial food processing for years to come.

Despite the extraordinary scope and unusual challenges, the project was completed on time and on budget.

“Demonstrating the ability to deliver a capable team –from ownership to project management to field leadership and field forces – to successfully execute a major project on time and on budget was a point of pride for our leadership,” said Millennium’s CEO, CJ Panzarella

Challenge #3: The 4th Floor

When it came to replacing the 4th floor of the MilkBone facility, the next issue that arose was that MCI’s work was literally four stories up – not an anomaly when renovating old industrial stock in a city like Buffalo, but no cakewalk, either. Which meant those 17,000 sq. ft. of removed wood flooring needed to get down… and the building materials needed to get up.

Key partners were essential to making this work – and, ultimately, the project’s success On the logistics side, equipment rental firm Admar ensured that removal and material-handling machinery (such as forklifts, dumpsters, and lifts) were on site and operational exactly when needed Sherwin-Williams, the supplier of the epoxy flooring materials, coordinated multiple

just-in-time deliveries so that MCI always had the required resin and aggregates on hand without overcrowding the jobsite.

“While MCI’s in-house capabilities allowed us to selfperform every aspect of this project, our vendor partnerships were essential to our processes, and kept the fast-paced project running smoothly from day one, ” said CJ Panzarella “Solid organization and strategic timing played a critical role in our ability to deliver ”

“Millennium Construction is a top-tier company for us and have been for a while,” said Mike O’Shea, ADMAR sales representative “It was our pleasure to help them service this project and see a successful job come to fruition and completion.”

Construction in a Working Food Production Facility

Construction in a working food production facility takes any project to a higher level of complexity Safety and cleanliness are paramount, and must be built directly into the process MCI employed vacuum-contained grinding equipment to minimize dust, and their crews succeeded in maintaining a clean work environment throughout the process.

“We are very proud that the flooring upgrade was executed with zero incidents and minimal disruption to plant operations,” said Gail Cefalu, owner. “It’s a testament to thorough planning and the professionalism of our field crews, and we appreciate Milk-Bone’s faith in us to get it right.”

The collaborative effort culminated in a state-of-the-art industrial floor that hit all the owner ’ s specifications. Upon completion, Milk-Bone was equipped with a durable, hygienic flooring system ready for the installation of new production lines and heavy equipment as the broader renovation continues.

Community Impact and Future Plans

When completed, J M Smucker Co ’ s $53 million modernization of the Buffalo Milk-Bone plant adds 17 new jobs while securing nearly 280 existing positions –a huge win for the East Side of Buffalo. By upgrading the facility’s infrastructure, the project helps ensure that this century-old plant remains efficient and costcompetitive, securing its long-term future in the region.

Milk-Bone has been an anchor employer on Buffalo’s East Side for generations, and its decision to reinvest in the Urban Street factory is nothing short of a major economic win. The plant’s local economic footprint is significant – it spends an estimated $28 million annually on local vendors and suppliers, multiplying the benefit to the community. Keeping this facility thriving helps sustain those business relationships and the area ’ s economic vitality.

A Partner in the Community

For MCI, being a great community partner isn’t just about doing great work on name-brand Western New York projects.

At the time of this writing, MCI is readying their 8th Annual Make-A-Wish Golf Tournament, where 100% of the proceeds go to Make-a-Wish’s local chapter. MCI has also been running a toy drive, The Christmas Bash for Kids, for decades and has also been avid supporters of the Ronald McDonald house throughout the years.

“Supporting and giving back to our community and causes that benefit the greater good has always been very important to the Millennium,” said Melissa Panzarella, owner “It’s always been an important part of our culture ”

Looking ahead, growth is on the horizon for both Milk-Bone and MCI MilkBone’s current renovations are slated to continue through 2026, with the larger plant expansion planned to come online by 2027 to accommodate a new production line Millennium Construction’s successful delivery of the flooring phase positions them as a trusted partner for future phases In fact, MCI has continued to cement its reputation as a go-to industrial flooring specialist in Western New York – after the Milk-Bone project, they’ve completed flooring jobs for Upstate Farms in Buffalo and O-At-Ka Milk in Batavia, among others, and will be back to Milk-Bone in spring 2026 to install another 50,000 sq. ft. of resinous flooring.

For a company that’s so good at flooring, there seems to be no ceiling.▪

Lighting the Way

to Savings and Sustainability at Tops Markets

For years, the familiar aisles of Tops Markets have been a community staple.

Now they shine in a new way – not with new shelves or signage, but with the glow of energy-efficient LED lights brightening the shopping experience.

The change is already paying off: reduced utility costs, greater in-store efficiency and a better experience for shoppers.

Chris Watson, Senior Director of Construction, Maintenance and Engineering for Tops Markets, stated that as part of the company ’ s ongoing commitment to energy efficiency and environmental responsibility, Tops has launched a strategic initiative to convert store lighting to high-efficiency LED fixtures.

“We have had an ongoing effort for energy efficiency and being environmentally responsible,” he said. “Also, with the escalating costs of energy, specifically electricity,

we ’ ve been trying to find ways to reduce consumption.”

He explained that efforts began years ago, when stores would undergo remodeling

“We would switch out the lighting, from the fluorescents to the more energy-efficient LEDs at that point,” Watson said.

However, with electrical rates rising and energy rebates coming to an end across New York State, the team at Tops knew it had limited time to take advantage of the savings.

“So, as the electrical rates keep rising, we partnered with NOCO and its Energy Solutions team to see if we could maximize the rebates from the utility companies and see how many stores from New York State we could get done before the

“Improving efficiency in these areas helps us reduce expenses and support sustainability. That’s why Tops makes energy efficiency a priority across every part of the store — helping control costs, lowering environmental impact and creating a brighter, greener shopping experience.”

rebates run out,” said Watson. “From the initial consultation, NOCO stood out for their professionalism, technical expertise and collaborative approach ”

This initiative was particularly impactful given the chain’s footprint: 151 full-service supermarkets and 58 fuel stations across New York, Pennsylvania and Vermont.

“With commercial refrigeration operating 24/7, year-round, refrigeration and lighting are our largest controllable energy costs,” said Watson. “Improving efficiency in these areas helps us reduce expenses and support sustainability That’s why Tops makes energy efficiency a priority across every part of the store helping control costs, lowering environmental impact and creating a brighter, greener shopping experience ”

Even with the aggressive timeline, NOCO was up for the challenge. Watson explained that Phase One of the project was implemented across 47 stores throughout New York, and forms part of a broader effort to modernize infrastructure, reduce energy consumption and improve the in-store experience

“We had already started the program, but we needed to partner with someone to help us navigate through the paperwork, the rebates, the materials. It just wasn’t something we could do inhouse,” Watson explained, noting that the Vermont stores had previously been updated. “Phase One will be New York stores because the rebates are ending. We are looking at a Phase Two that will be updating the Pennsylvania stores.”

Watson said this could not have been done without the expertise of the team at NOCO, explaining that they did so much more than physically changing out the lights

“They evaluated the lighting needs across multiple store formats Then they identified and applied for utility rebate and incentive opportunities, which was tremendously helpful,” he said. “Not to mention developing a phased implementation plan tailored to our store operations.”

Plus, the work was executed with minimal disruption to store associates and customers.

“There wasn’t any downtime for the stores. The way NOCO was able to do it was by starting work at second shift and third shift, when the stores are closed, and they were cleaned up by the time the stores opened around 6 a m , ” he said

Watson said the work for Phase One began with a pilot store around the end of November 2024, and the entire phase is expected to be completed by press time

“We have stores that range in size between 8,000 square feet, all the way up to 110,000 square feet.

So, the smaller stores could be completed in

“There wasn’t any downtime for the stores. The way NOCO was able to do it was by starting work at second shift and third shift, when the stores are closed, and they were cleaned up by the time the stores opened around 6 a.m.”

basically two nights, while the others took about two to three weeks to complete. And at one point, NOCO had three, maybe even a fourth crew going at a time,” he said

Of course, there was a learning curve as work began, such as communicating with store managers, scheduling around high-traffic locations and ensuring that light levels matched each store’s layout. Still, Watson said NOCO handled it like the pros they are.

“A key challenge was managing material lead times with the project moving so quickly,” he said.

We needed to ensure every light was on hand to avoid delays, and NOCO delivered exceptionally well ”

With the new lighting fixtures throughout stores, Tops Markets’ annual energy savings are estimated at 16 million kilowatt-hours Watson said if rates stay the same, that adds up to $1.6 million annually in reduced electricity costs.

In addition to the savings and efficiency, Watson said there are other benefits to the new lighting.

“The new lighting is brighter, cleaner and gives our stores a more modern look,” he said “We’re consistently hearing positive feedback on visibility and comfort from both customers and employees For our team members who spend long hours in the same store, the enhanced brightness makes a real difference ”

He went on to explain that there’s

also an improved safety element with the new lights

“[The LEDs] improve the consistency of lighting across all departments If we have darker areas, say in the back room where some of the walk-in freezers or coolers are, it’s now safer for our employees,” Watson said

He said it’s also reducing maintenance calls by an astounding 80 percent.

“The routine lighting calls used to be crews going out once a month or bimonthly to change bulbs and ballasts. Those are now replaced by warranty service. It’s on-call, and it’s very infrequent that we have an issue, and it’s costing us nothing,” Watson said, explaining that Tops previously subcontracted this service out, so it does not impact their staff

When walking through the stores, Watson and his team can’t help but notice how good the products look on

the shelves with the new lighting.

“Take the boxes in the cereal aisle, for example, because of all the different colors When the LED lights are above them, it really pulls out the

“We’re consistently hearing positive feedback on visibility and comfort from both customers and employees.”

colors The red looks redder The blue looks bluer It gives the products a crisper look It’s just a nicer feel as you walk through the aisles,” he said

He said it’s too soon to quantify whether the stores are seeing an increase yet, but he does think it’s having a positive impact on sales.

And that’s just one of the many benefits Tops Markets is reaping, proving that the future looks brighter than ever

“This project represents a major step forward in how we manage energy and sustainability at Tops Markets It demonstrates that smart infrastructure investments can deliver financial, environmental and customer experience benefits simultaneously.

Working with NOCO has been a highly productive partnership. Their ability to provide technical insight, secure rebates and deliver execution with minimal impact to store operations made them an ideal partner for this initiative,” he said ▪

Tops Markets had nothing but praise for NOCO, though the team preferred to stay out of the spotlight for this story

1895 Electric LLC

60 School St #1114

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 225-4458

360 Land Survey, DPC

2368 Maryland Avenue

Niagara Falls, NY 14305

T: (716) 587-8380

4th Generation Co.

5650 Simmons Avenue

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 283-7057

716 Ministries

301 14th Street

Buffalo, NY 14213

T: (716) 828-8681

716 Site Contracting Inc.

PO Box 120

North Boston, NY 14110

T: (716) 912-8328

84 Lumber Co.

3317 Walden Avenue

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 683-8450

A Superior Concrete 8443 Slayton Settlement Road

Gasport, NY 14067

T: (716) 772-2276

A-1 Concrete Leveling

80 Skillen Street

Buffalo, NY 14207

T: (716) 341-4550

2025 MEMBERS

A-1 Construction & Painting

299 Kenmore Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14223 T: (716) 833-6943

A-1 Land Care Inc

1527 Ridge Road

Lewiston, NY 14092

T: (716) 754-4999

AAA Trash B Gone 1711 Union Road

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 602-9611

Aberdeen Plate Glass Co., Inc.

2119 South Park Avenue Buffalo, NY 14220

T: (716) 826-4444

ABR Wholesalers Inc. 94 Benbro Drive Buffalo, NY 14225

T: (716) 681-6360

Abraxas, Inc. 1769 Baseline Road Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 774-8844

Ace Flagpole Company 5444 Transit Road

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 681-2345

ACE Mechanical Services

2990 Carney Dr

Sanborn, NY 14132

T: (716) 833-3500

ACP Buffalo 135 Delaware Ave Frnt 103

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 278-9419

Action Commercial Repair LLC

1336 Main Street

Buffalo, NY 14209

T: (716) 881-4357

Action Roofing, Inc. 10267 Crump Road

Glenwood, NY 14069

T: (716) 592-7752

Active Fence Co., Inc. 5295 Bayview Road Hamburg, NY 14705

T: (716) 648-3970

Active Logistics Inc. PO Box 2052

Blasdell, NY 14219

T: (716) 826-9351

Active Workforce, Inc. 853 Brighton Road Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 447-9988

Adams Leclair LLP

28 E Main Street Rochester, NY 14614

T: (585) 327-4100

Adema Heating & Air Conditioning

378 Englewood Avenue Buffalo, NY 14223

T: (716) 834-7611

Admar Supply Company, Inc. 1394 Military Road

Tonawanda, NY 14217

T: (716) 873-8000

Advanced Cable Technology, Inc 184 Two Road Road Marilla, NY 14102

T: (716) 902-4266

AEP Manufacturing

303 Industrial Drive Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 799-3796

Aerotek

300 Airborne Parkway Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 997-5447

AFP Group, Inc. 6746 Akron Road Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 438-7970

AJ’s Heating & Cooling 143 Autunmwood Drive Buffalo, NY 14227

T: (716) 271-2446

AJ’s Tree Service PO Box 650 East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 908-1282

Aktion Associates

3454 Parkwood Common Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 344-8145

MEMBERS

Alba Coatings Inc.

346 Oliver Street

North Tonawanda, NY 14120

T: (716) 693-9500

Alcott HR

350 Essjay Rd Ste 120

Buffalo, NY 14221

T: (716) 236-8852

Alesco Advisors LLC

120 Office Park Way

Pittsford, NY 14564

T: (585) 586-0970

All Pro Plumbing

31 Main St

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 825-7767

All State Fire and Security

400 Mineral Springs Road

Buffalo, NY 14224

T: (716) 783-9670

Alleghany Industrial Insulation Co.

48 Buck Rd Lewis Run, PA 16738

T: (716) 368-6960

Alleghany Services

PO Box 707

Basom, NY 14013

T: (585) 762-4411

Allgaier Construction Corporation

10080 County Road

Clarence, NY 14032

T: (716) 741-7350

Alliance Construction of WNY

DBA Alliance Homes

4727 Camp Road

Hamburg, NY 14705

T: (716) 646-6555

Allied Mechanical, Inc.

1111 Niagara Street

Buffalo, NY 14213

T: (716) 882-1234

Allstate General Contracting, Inc.

31 Ransier Drive

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 675-0333

ALP Steel Corporation

PO Box 1085

Buffalo, NY 14220

T: (716) 854-3030

Alta Construction Equipment

New York, LLC

4554 West Saile Drive

Batavia, NY 14020

T: (716) 770-7989

American Concrete of WNY Inc. PO Box 572

Lockport, NY 14095

T: (716) 923-5017

American Concrete Pavement Association of New York State PO Box 42 East Schodack, NY 12063 T: (518) 527-1547

American Constructors 548 York Street Olean, NY 14760 T: (716) 904-3048

American Contracting & Environmental Services Inc 11075 Stratfield Ct

Marriottsvillle, MD 21104

T: (716) 796-4067

American Demolition & Nuclear Decommissioning (American DND) PO Box 553

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (866) 699-5515

American Fence 21 Peuquet Parkway Tonawanda, NY 14150 T: (716) 692-8283

American National Insurance, Agent 2075 Kenmore Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14207

T: (716) 424-3123

American Paving & Excavating Inc.

5880 Thompson Road

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 741-2649

Amherst Chamber of Commerce

400 Essjay Road

Buffalo, NY 14221

T: (716) 632-6905

Amherst Paving

330 Meyer Road

Amherst, NY 14226

T: (716) 834-4961

Amrize 75 Pineview Drive Amherst, NY 14228 T: (716) 580-2935

Amstar of Western New York, Inc. 825 Rein Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 204-9755

Anastasi Trucking & Paving Company 4430 Walden Avenue Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 683-5003

Anchor Concrete & Coatings

77 Idlewood Drive West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 205-7069

Anderson Equipment Co. 2140 Military Road Tonawanda, NY 14150 T: (716) 877-1992

Apollo Steel Corp. 4800 Wilton Avenue Niagara Falls, NY 14304 T: (716) 283-8758

AprilAire

50 Pinewood Trail

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 474-4481

Aqua Systems of WNY 7071 Transit Road East Amherst, NY 14051 T: (716) 688-0139

Arc Building Partners LLC 100 South Elmwood Avenue Buffalo, NY 14202 T: (716) 427-6100

Archie Donoughe Sanding, Inc. 163 Robinson Street North Tonawanda, NY 14120 T: (716) 692-8416

Architectural Building Products 95 Dorothy Street Buffalo, NY 14206 T: (716) 875-5030

Arctic Refrigeration Company of Batavia, Inc. 26 Cedar Street Batavia, NY 14020 T: (585) 343-2678

Arric Corp. 5033 Transit Road Depew, NY 14043 T: (716) 681-3535

Arrow Sheet Metal Works, Inc. 75 Thielman Drive Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 847-6800

Ash Grove 1751 Fuhrmann Boulevard Buffalo, NY 14203 T: (716) 254-0416

Ashford Gypsum Services, Inc. 2343 Union Road

Cheektowga, NY 14227 T: (716) 822-4611

ASI Signage Innovations

2957 Alt Boulevard

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 775-0104

Aslan Plumbing and Mechanical Services, Inc.

5715 Royalton Center Road

Gasport, NY 14067

T: (716) 735-3927

Assembly House 150 Inc.

150 Edward Street Buffalo, NY 14201

T: (716) 560-8170

Assured Partners

90A John Muir Drive Buffalo, NY 14228

T: (716) 688-8888

Astonoshine 2143 Union Rd West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 844-2802

Aurora Craftworks 1278 Carriage Dr East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 860-3115

Aurora Door & Window, LLC 1158 Davis Road West Falls, NY 14170

T: (716) 500-3667

Aurora Window Systems & Contracting, Inc. 710 Kensington Avenue Buffalo, NY 14215

T: (716) 833-2500

A-Verdi Storage Containers 14150 State Route 31 Savannah, NY 13146

T: (800) 248-3734

B&J Development and Contracting 33 Turnberry Road Buffalo, NY 14212

T: (716) 830-0878

B&L Wholesale Supply Inc. 1 Bud Mil Drive Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 853-2600

B. J. Muirhead, Inc. 115 Mid County Drive Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 667-7100

B.T.S. Services Inc. 7871 Transit Road East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 688-4812

Babcock Development Inc.

153 Stonebridge Road

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 604-5325

Balducci Construction Co., Inc. 521 Pound Road

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 632-6572

Bank On Buffalo 535 Washington Street Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 462-5500

Barclay Damon, LLP 200 Delaware Avenue Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 566-1510

MEMBERS

Barry Steel Fabrication, Inc.

PO Box 579

Lockport, NY 14095

T: (716) 433-2144

Batavia Turf LLC

6465 Transit Road

Elba, NY 14058

T: (585) 548-2552

Battista Construction Inc

3115 North Benzing Road

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 823-0191

BBT Construction Service

8289 Sackett Road

Bergen, NY 14416

T: (585) 415-0195

Beau Enterprises

4250 Williams Road

Ransomville, NY 14131

T: (716) 791-3000

Belknap Heating & Cooling Inc

8655 Transit Road

East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 688-1728

Bella Concrete Solutions LLC

2234 Bedell Road

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 453-1422

Belmont Housing Resources for WNY, Inc

2393 Main Street

Buffalo, NY 14214

T: (716) 884-7791

Benchley Cranes

PO Box 220

Forestville, NY 14062

T: (716) 934-4330

Bender’s Technical Detailing, Inc.

275 Fillmore Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 695-7693

Benderson Development Co., LLC

570 Delaware Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 886-0211

Berkley Building, Inc

114 Prospect Avenue

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 445-4375

Berts Services WNY

4611 East Highland Parkway

Blasdell, NY 14219

T: (716) 983-6108

Besroi Construction Corp. 5434 Genesee Street

Bowmansville, NY 14026

T: (716) 684-0355

Bestbath 723 Garber Street

Caldwell, ID 83605

T: (716) 525-5054

BGI Interiors, Inc 22 Simon Avenue

Lackawanna, NY 14218

T: (716) 893-1417

Big L Windows & Doors 2727 William Street

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 895-8484

Bin There Dump That 5607 Palmyra Rd Unit 37 Pittsford, NY 14534

T: (716) 246-2136

Bison Construction CCC 90 Whitewater Way

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 418-4333

Bison Electrical Services Corporation 2548 Elmwood Avenue

Kenmore, NY 14217

T: (716) 833-7300

Bison Elevator Service, Inc.

295 Main Street Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 852-3031

Bison Iron & Step 1601 Harlem Road Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 893-5777

Bison Scaffold & Masons Supply, Inc 885 Bailey Avenue Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 821-1995

Black Rock Controls 2852 Delaware Road Buffalo, NY 14217

T: (716) 912-8392

Blackline Site Development

6274 Main Road

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 957-2926

Blackstone Construction of WNY, Inc. 11800 Big Tree Road

Wales Center, NY 14169

T: (716) 397-2431

Bliss Construction 6790 Main Street

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 204-2910

Blue Cord Plumbing & HVAC 5487 Pinkney Road Castile, NY 14427

T: (716) 912-0643

Blue Line Concrete and Construction LLC. 1294 East Delevan Avenue Buffalo, NY 14215

T: (716) 812-9768

Blue Ox Roofing 2139 Lockport Road

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 731-6671

Blum Builders Inc. 8570 Roll Road

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 741-9970

BMG Systems Inc.

PO Box 1307

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 432-5160

BMHA

320 Perry Street

Buffalo, NY 14204

T: (716) 855-6711

BMI Supply

571 Queensbury Avenue

Queensbury, NY 12804

T: (518) 793-6706

BOMA Buffalo

465 Main Street

Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 856-3801

Bond, Schoeneck & King, PLLC

200 Delaware Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 853-7262

BondEd

122 Columbia Boulevard

Kenmore, NY 14217

T: (716) 713-2094

Brady Electric, Inc.

63 Industrial Drive

North Tonawanda, NY 14120

T: (716) 693-0404

BrandSafway

36 Broadway

Menands, NY 12204

T: (412) 295-7185

Brawdy Construction PO Box 470

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 741-8714

BRD Construction Inc.

82 Pearl Street

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 847-0042

Brier Hill Contracting Inc.

1716 Alleghany Road

Attica, NY 14011

T: (585) 591-1868

Brite 7647 Main Street Fishers

Victor, NY 14564

T: (800) 333-0498

Brooks Rigging Corp. 621 Conley Road

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 652-8121

Brushing Buffalo

5320 Webster Rd

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 222-2152

Buffalo Architectural Casting, Inc.

315 Hinman Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14216

T: (716) 885-9020

Buffalo Barricade LLC

237 Fillmore Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 694-2250

Buffalo Commercial Flooring & Installations

2262 Union Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 997-6525

Buffalo Concrete Accessories

250 Grider Street

Buffalo, NY 14215

T: (716) 8332-2800

Buffalo Concrete Coatings

1 Cadby Industrial Parkway

Lancaster, NY 14006

T: (716) 986-7325

Buffalo Construction Consultants Inc

496 Kennedy Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 302-4040

MEMBERS

Buffalo Drilling Company, Inc.

10440 Main Street

Clarence, NY 14031

T: (716) 759-7821

Buffalo Energy

5800 A Seneca Street

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 677-4899

Buffalo Erie Niagara Land Improvement Corporation

403 Main Street

Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 243-3996

Buffalo Garage Door Services

2926 Transit Road

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 605-8727

Buffalo Landscape Design, Inc.

990 Campbell Boulevard

Amherst, NY 14228

T: (716) 673-5477

Buffalo Lodging Associates

584 Delaware Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 566-5118

Buffalo Marine Construction, LLC.

2174 West Oakfield Road

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 982-5192

Buffalo Networks Inc.

525 Hertel Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14207

T: (716) 210-9056

Buffalo Niagara Partnership

79 Perry Street Suite 200

Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 852-7100

Buffalo’s Best Roofing Company LLC

4589 Genesee Street

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 276-3673

Builders Hardware

9089 Main Street

Clarence, NY 14031

T: (513) 954-6751

Built General Contracting 659 West Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14213

T: (716) 640-1861

Burgio & Campofelice Inc

2721 Transit Road

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 685-6595

BVR Construction Company, Inc.

8 King Road

Churchville, NY 14428

T: (585) 458-9730

C L Winter Construction LLC 5868 County Line Road Perry, NY 14530

T: (585) 447-0277

C&T Design & Equipment

786 Terrace Boulevard Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 302-4284

C. Concrete Inc.

4347 Broadway Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 683-6826

C.C. Construction & Remodeling 362 Lein Road West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 939-3015

C.S. Behler, Inc.

203 South Mary’s Street Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 684-6060

CAHill TECH PO Box 166

Akron, NY 14001

T: (716) 364-3022

Calamar Construction Management, Inc.

3949 Forest Parkway, Suite 100 Wheatfield, NY 14120

T: (716) 632-0006

Call Associates 567 Exchange Street

Buffalo, NY 14210

T: (716) 853-1045

Cambar Contracting Inc.

4676 Baer Road

Ransomville, NY 14131

T: (716) 913-5241

CamCo General Contracting Inc. 10994 Tinkham Road

Darien Center, NY 14040

T: (585) 547-3898

Campione Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc

6215 Heise Road Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 741-2448

Campobello Construction Co., Inc. 23 Stratford Road Buffalo, NY 14216

T: (716) 873-5090

Campus Construction Management Group Inc. 6225 Sheridan Drive Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 239-4884

Camtech 4715 Hyde Park Boulevard

Niagara Falls, NY 14305

T: (716) 278-0174

Cannon Design 50 Fountain Plaza Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 774-3268

Capital Fence Co., Inc 42 North Ellicott Creek Road

Amherst, NY 14228

T: (716) 691-7438

Cappella Construction Services 4210 Route 39 Collins, NY 14034

T: (716) 544-5455

Carrigan Painting 7525 Tonawanda Creek Road Lockport, NY 14094 T: (716) 622-6848

Catalano Contracting

480 Kennedy Rd

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 896-5032

CATCO

1266 Townline Road

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 651-4642

Cavlee Development Inc.

5983 South Transit Road Lockport, NY 14094 T: (716) 628-6720

Caysea Contracting 65 Allendale Road West Seneca, NY 14224 T: (716) 677-4858

Cedarland Construction Group 60 Lakefront Boulevard Buffalo, NY 14202 T: (716) 217-9105

Cellino Plumbing Inc. 631 Bullis Road

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 675-1111

Centofanti Construction 404 55th Street

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 622-9563

Certified Safety Products of NY 807 State Route 417 East Andover, NY 14806

T: (607) 478-8467

CFO Solutions Plus

2410 North Forest Road

Getzville, NY 14068

T: (716) 648-1710

Chevalier Lawn & Landscaping

9580 New York 39

Springville, NY 14141

T: (716) 592-0854

Chiampou Travis Besaw & Kershner LLP

45 Bryant Woods North Amherst, NY 14228

T: (716) 630-2400

Chittenden & Dylag LLC

9614 Snipery Road

Corfu, NY 14036

T: (585) 599-3075

Christa Construction LLC

737 Delaware Avenue Buffalo, NY 14209

T: (716) 393-1317

Cintron Contractors Inc.

3069 Clinton Street West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 777-1280

CIR Electrical Construction Corp

2517 Long Road Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 362-5000

CityView Construction Management

726 Exchange Street Buffalo, NY 14210

T: (716) 856-8400

CJS Architects

755 Seneca Street

Buffalo, NY 14210

T: (716) 856-6448

Clarence Wall and Ceiling, Inc.

9393 Main Street

Clarence, NY 14031

T: (716) 759-2944

Clark Companies

500 Ohio Street

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 433-4600

Clayhill Construction Corp.

62 Webb Street

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 990-3838

Clean MD Commercial Cleaning Inc.

3176 Abbott Road, Suite 100W

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 671-8068

Clean Water Mechanical and Construction LLC 16 Stranton Street Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 853-1061

Cleanscapes LLC

11100 Transit Road

East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 818-2320

Clearfield Enterprises

291 Clearfield Drive

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 570-6703

CME Associates, Inc

2727 Broadway Street Buffalo, NY 14227

T: (716) 877-9577

CMH Co. Inc.

12750 North Road

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 937-6307

CMK Builders of Alden, Inc

1663 County Line Road

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 713-2029

CNA Surety

595 New Loudon Road

Latham, NY 12110

T: (518) 313-4053

Cold Spring Construction Co. 3 Jackson Street

Akron, NY 14001

T: (716) 542-2011

Collingwood Construction Corp. PO Box 686

Getzville, NY 14068

T: (716) 689-2213

Colony Hardware

128 Saint Paul Street

Rochester, NY 14604

T: (315) 418-6092

Color Tech Painting Contractors Inc

200 Roosevelt Street Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 807-0300

Colvin Draperies Inc.

2429 Elmwood Avenue

Kenmore, NY 14217

T: (716) 362-9720

Commercial Pipe & Supply Corp.

1920 Elmwood Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14207

T: (716) 875-1300

Community Steel Corporation PO Box 883

Buffalo, NY 14240

T: (716) 854-5927

Concept Concrete Construction LLC 8846 Goodrich Road

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 816-6227

MEMBERS

Concept Construction Corp.

2555 Transit Road

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 675-9171

ConEquip Parts

3370 Walden Ave

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 836-5069

Construction Cloud Solutions

2558 Hamburg Turnpike

Lackawanna, NY 14218

T: (716) 364-6685

Construction Trades Staffing, Inc

3959 North Buffalo Road

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 204-7555

Contour Steel

PO Box 7

Lakeview, NY 14085

T: (716) 627-1140

Cooper Sign Company /

Old Glory Flag & Banner

7350 Porter Road

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 297-2340

Cooper & Slate Inc.

1729 Bailey Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14211

T: (716) 893-0402

Core and Main

650 West Avenue

Lockport, NY 14095

T: (716) 625-8666

Countryside Builders

306 King Road

Forestville, NY 14062

T: (716) 951-3118

County Line Stone

4515 Crittden Road

Akron, NY 14001

T: (716) 542-5435

COVERCO

2260 Clinton Street

Cheektowaga, NY 14206

T: (716) 773-7110

CPL

726 Exchange Street

Buffalo, NY 14210

T: (716) 566-1706

CPR Remodeling Pros

44 Domedion Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14211

T: (716) 578-7524

Craig Construction LLC 11 Pinewood Trail

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 913-7689

Cranesville Block Co. Inc

400 Pfohl Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (518) 627-9119

Creative Remodeling Services, LLC

3614 North Buffalo Road

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 662-9277

Creeley Construction LLC

2343 Union Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 822-4611

Crushr

460 Dodge Road

Getzville, NY 14068

T: (716) 800-8321

CSB Construction Services Inc.

PO Box 193

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 553-5825

CSS Construction

550 Seneca Street

Buffalo, NY 14204

T: (716) 882-1226

CTS Contracting Inc.

320 Crabapple Lane

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 668-4444

Culligan Water Conditioning

31 Lewis Road

Akron, NY 14001

T: (716) 807-5202

Curecrete Distribution, Inc.

1203 Spring Creek Place

Springville, UT 84663

T: (801) 592-5196

Custom Carpet Centers

2847 Southwestern Boulevard

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 674-0678

Custom Crews, Inc. 6111 Old Niagara Road

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 434-6600

CVF Inc.

100 Burkhardt Avenue

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 836-1673

D&H Excavating Inc

11939 Rt 98 South

Arcade, NY 14009

T: (716) 492-4956

D&H Paving LLC

485 Kennedy Road

Cheektowaga, NY

T: (716) 893-0066

D&M Refrigeration, Inc.

1340 William Street

Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 852-4084

D.R. Chamberlain Corp.

50 Simonds Street

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 434-7301

D.V. Brown & Associates, Inc.

567 Vickers Street

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 695-5533

Dan’s Snow Plowing LLC

66 Aberdeen Street

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 428-3244

Davis-Ulmer Fire Protection

One Commerce Drive

Amherst, NY 14228

T: (716) 691-3200

Day Automation Systems

435 Lawrence Bell Drive

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (800) 836-0969

DCB Elevator Co., Inc.

310 Center Street

Lewiston, NY 14092

T: (716) 754-1645

DDD Specialty Inc.

75 Franklin St PO Box 1

Springville, NY 14111

T: (716) 777-1847

Decks Unlimited Construction Co

495 Erie Street

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 901-0900

Deltex Electric Inc.

220 Elk Street Buffalo, NY 14210

T: (716) 822-8622

DeSpirt Mosaic & Marble Co., Inc.

1085 East Delavan Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14215

T: (716) 892-5294

DGI Electrical Services, Inc

2735 Bedell Road

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 297-7999

Dig It of New York, LLC

3529 Broadway Street

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 684-7232

Dirt Works Inc.

11518 Jamison Road

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 863-1744

DiVal Safety Equipment Co., Inc.

1721 Niagara Street

Buffalo, NY 14207

T: (716) 874-9060

DJM Contracting, Inc.

8743 East Eden Road

Eden, NY 14057

T: (716) 575-4232

DMR Contracting, Inc

300 Gleed Avenue

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 655-2035

DMYLES Inc

1901 Connecticut Avenue

Niagara Falls, NY 14305

T: (716) 909-0718

Dobkin Tile & Stone

51 Benbro Drive

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 684-1200

Donahue Control Corporation

11834 Westwood Road

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 863-3060

Door 2 Door Inc.

4578 Sunset Drive

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 694-0700

Door Specialties, Inc.

530 Fillmore Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 895-6155

Draghi Burgos Construction, LLC

681 Michigan Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14213

T: (716) 949-6127

Driven Contracting Inc.

1891 French Road

Varysburg, NY 14167

T: (585) 535-7175

Duda Woodworks LLC

1901 Folsomdale Road

Cowlesville, NY 14037

T: (585) 322-4598

Duke Holzman Photiadis & Ritter, LLP

701 Seneca Street

Buffalo, NY 14210

T: (716) 855-1111

Durable Demolition, LLC

PO Box 71

Lockport, NY 14095

T: (716) 957-2604

DWC Mechanical, Inc.

100 John Glenn Drive

Amherst, NY 14228

T: (716) 891-0350

Dynabrade, Inc.

8989 Sheridan Drive

Clarence, NY 14031

T: (716) 982-1692

Dyno Group Inc.

61 Johnson Drive

Buffalo, NY 14201

T: (716) 616-0056

E & D Specialty Stands Inc.

2081 Franklin Street

North Collins, NY 14111

T: (716) 337-0161

E & M Star Painting Inc.

3503 Genesee Street

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 863-4917

MEMBERS

E & R General Construction

38 St. Davids Drive

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 675-5277

E.J. Militello Concrete Inc.

8565 Roll Road

Clarence Center, NY 14302

T: (716) 406-9741

Eastwood Industries, Inc.

PO Box 305

North Boston, NY 14110

T: (716) 941-7420

EBC HR & Payroll Time Parking

301 Ohio Street

Buffalo, NY 14204

T: (716) 674-7900

Eberl Iron Works, Inc

128 Sycamore Street

Buffalo, NY 14204

T: (716) 854-7633

Edbauer Construction

2790 Clinton Street

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 883-0280

Edward H Cox Co , Inc

58415 Shamrock Court

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 648-6321

Edward Hulme, Inc.

17 East Buffalo Street

Warsaw, NY 14569

T: (585) 786-5880

Ehrhart CM Services, Inc.

161 Main Street

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 799-7074

E-lectric of WNY LLC

45 Park Lane S East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 481-2375

Elevator Maintenance of Buffalo, Inc.

65 Innsbruck Drive

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 854-5454

Elite Excavation LLC

3302 S Creek Rd

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 863-8186

Elk Specialty Flooring

5880 Route 39

Springville, NY 14141

T: (716) 715-1805

Ellicott Development Company

295 Main Street Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 854-0060

Emerald Services of WNY, Inc 1504 Bailey Avenue Buffalo, NY 14212

T: (716) 570-2211

Emerling, Floss, Murphy

9092 Main Street

Clarence, NY 14031

T: (716) 932-3012

Empire Building Diagnostics, Inc

400 Ingham Avenue

Lackawana, NY 14218

T: (716) 685-4588

Empire Dismantlement Corp

2680 Grand Island Boulevard

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 773-7707

Empire Erectors Inc. PO Box 1066

Buffalo, NY 14220

T: (716) 667-1362

Empire State Signs

317 Wheeler Street

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 213-0797

Employer Services Corp.

20 Pineview Drive

Buffalo, NY 14228

T: (716) 691-4455

Encorus Group

23 Mechanic Street

Springville, NY 14141

T: (716) 592-3980

Enders Contracting

PO Box 45

North Collins, NY 14111

T: (716) 248-0022

Endurance Electrical Services LLC

4857 Ellicott Street

Batavia, NY 14020

T: (585) 565-6191

Engersmart Insulation

483 Sawyer Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 775-8035

Engasser Construction Corporation 1569 Boies Rd

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 655-1816

Engineered Air

1951 Hamburg Turnpike

Buffalo, NY 14218

T: (716) 861-3244

Engineered Solutions Inc

9411 Versailles Road

Angola, NY 14006

T: (716) 982-3189

EOS Worldwide

68 Walton Drive

Buffalo, NY 14226

T: (716) 383-3608

Epic Contracting

4991 Scrabble Hill Road

Collins, NY 14034

T: (716) 662-2782

Equipment Share

2181 Lockport Road

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 205-7750

Erb Company Inc. PO Box 1269 Buffalo, NY 14240

T: (716) 825-1400

Erie 1 BOCES

355 Harlem Road

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 821-7000

Erie Community College

6205 Main Street

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 851-1542

Erie Contracting, Inc.

188 Erie Street

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 686-3860

Erie County Industrial Agency 95 Perry Street Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 856-6525

Erie Test and Balance PO Box 141 West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 381-8819

Essential Construction Services LLC 1941 Harlem Road Buffalo, NY 14212

T: (716) 336-1275

ETS Clearing 4159 Foxwood Lane

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 270-3895

Eugene R Sprecker Inc

5735 Maelou Dr Ste 1

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 649-3866

Everon, LLC

3332 Walden Avenue

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 235-3620

Excavation Pros Inc.

3214 Genesee

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 473-2291

F & S Environmental, Inc.

282 Lydia Lane Buffalo, NY 14225

T: (716) 683-5939

Fairway Floor Covering, Inc.

55 North Gates Avenue

Lackawanna, NY 14218

T: (716) 842-3131

Fanti Electric LLC

278 Faraday Road

Buffalo, NY 14223

T: (716) 349-0797

Fathom Testing

300 Gleed Avenue

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 259-0084

Federowicz Concrete, LLC

2 Wending Court

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 206-0024

Felber’s Building Supply, Inc.

5555 Transit Road

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 688-5517

Felgemacher Masonry & Chimney

2727 Broadway

Buffalo, NY 14227

T: (716) 907-4914

Ferguson Electric Construction Company

321 Ellicott Street

Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 852-2010

Ferraro Pile & Shoring, Inc.

13590 Genesee Street

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 937-4800

Fibertech Environmental Services, Inc

149 Gunnville Road

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 876-4080

Fiddler Roofing Inc.

2335 Niagara Falls Boulevard

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 284-1322

Filipiak Construction Consulting and Management

3913 South Park Avenue

Blasdell, NY 14219

T: (716) 997-9668

Fire Safety Systems, Inc.

525 Aero Drive

Buffalo, NY 14225

T: (716) 894-9700

Fisher Concrete Inc.

741 Welch Road

Java Center, NY 14082

T: (585) 457-3221

Five Star Equipment

284 Ellicott Road, PO Box 985

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 662-2191

Flawless Finish

4000 Grant Ave

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 289-1947

FlexGround

6091 Seneca Street

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 948-0221

Forbes-Capretto Homes

470 Cayuga Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 688-5597

Foreman Enterprise, Inc. PO Box 587

East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 440-1721

Forest Materials, Inc.

1665 Harlem Road

Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 895-3900

Fortified

5353 Main Street #150

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (833) 310-1554

FOS of Cannon Design

50 Fountain Plaza

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 774-3364

Fox Fence, Inc

2637 Lockport Road

Niagara Falls, NY 14305

T: (716) 284-1444

Freed Maxick CPAs, PC

424 Main Street

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 847-2651

Frey Electric Construction Company, Inc.

100 Pearce Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 874-1710

Frey Well Drilling, Inc

11565 Broadway

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 937-7977

Frontier Glass

3322 Sheridan Drive

Amherst, NY 14226

T: (716) 835-4402

Frontier Group of Companies

500 Seneca Street

Buffalo, NY 14204

T: (716) 447-7587

Frontier Insulation Contractors

2101 Kenmore Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14207

T: (716) 874-6470

Frontier Management and Development

2315 Whirlpool Street

Niagara Falls, NY 14305

T: (716) 288-4871

FSR Contracting Inc.

4140 South Taylor Road

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 822-1200

G&J Contracting, Inc.

5140 Walmore Road

Sanborn, NY 14132

T: (716) 297-0389

Galbo Group

786 Terrace Boulevard

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 662-1044

Gallgher Insurance

285 Delaware Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 853-7960

Gallman Excavating

4735 Zenner Road

Eden, NY 14057

T: (716) 432-4642

GDI Integrated Facility Services

5357 Bly Hill Road

Ashville, NY 14710

T: (716) 418-2519

Geiter Done of WNY, Inc.

300 Greene St

Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 895-8121

Genesis Development & Construction 4455 Genesee Street

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 570-5163

Gernatt

13870 Taylor Hollow Road

Collins, NY 14034

T: (716) 532-3371

Asphalt Products, Inc.

MEMBERS

Gernatt Spray Foam, LLC

2986 Brown St Collins, NY 14034

T: (716) 353-2684

Gilbane Building Company

374 Delaware Avenue Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 517-1104

Gleeson Powers, Inc

10 Southville Road

Southborough, MA 01772

T: (716) 279-2601

Goergen-Mackwirth Company, Inc

349 Sawyer Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 874-4800

GONETSPEED

2371 George Urban Blvd

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 383-2208

Good Carbon Co

26 Mississippi Street Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 863-6160

Goodwin Electric Corporation

201 South Youngs Road

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 634-4000

Gorenflo’s Buffalo Wholesale Lock Co., Inc.

1349 Main Street Buffalo, NY 14209

T: (716) 882-6603

Grand Island Waste Solutions LLC

3019 Bedell Road

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 774-0418

Granzow Construction PO Box 607

Gasport, NY 14067

T: (716) 807-5502

Graybar Electric Company

425 Cayuga Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 565-5900

Graystone Consulting 300 Linden Oaks Rochester, NY 14625

T: (585) 389-2271

Great American Insurance Group 301 East 4th Street Cincinnati, OH 45201

T: (617) 308-2834

Great Lakes Building Systems, Inc 116 Gruner Road Buffalo, NY 14059

T: (716) 892-5253

Great Lakes Iron Inc

2305 Youngstown-Lockport Road

Ransomville, NY 14131

T: (716) 622-8908

Great Lakes Plumbing

2356 Staley Rd

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 773-1313

Greater Niagara Mechanical Inc.

7311 Ward Road

North Tonawanda, NY 14120

T: (716) 695-3600

Green Mountain Electric Supply

802 West Seneca St

Ithaca, NY 14850

T: (607) 882-9506

Greenauer Blacktop Inc.

391 French Road

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 826-6565

Greenway USA LLC

960 Busti Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14213

T: (646) 833-7127

Gross Shuman, PC

465 Main Street

Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 854-5300

Ground Breaking Solutions LLC

1019 Blakeley Road

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 984-9434

Grove Roofing Services, Inc.

131 Reading Street

Buffalo, NY 14220

T: (716) 828-1870

Guard Construction and Contracting Corporation

455 Commerce Drive

Amherst, NY 14228

T: (716) 819-8992

Gypsum Systems, LLC

PO Box 449

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 652-9573

GZA

300 Pearl Street

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 685-2300

H & H Roofing, Inc.

7430 Olean Road

Holland, NY 14080

T: (716) 655-0258

H&V Sales, Inc.

2800 Walden Avenue

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 897-5010

H. C. Zang Agency, Inc.

6204 Goodrich Road

Clarence, NY 14032

T: (716) 877-3677

H. J. Seitz Paving & Construction Company, Inc.

8334 County Road

East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 741-2282

H.R.Georgi Construction INC

4861 Gunbarrel Road

Springville, NY 14141

T: (716) 697-5189

Habitat for Humanity Buffalo

1675 South Park Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14220

T: (716) 764-9548

Hale Technology in Practice LLC

232 S Plymouth Avenue

Rochester, NY 14608

T: (716) 696-2876

Haley Concrete, Inc.

10413 Delevan-Elton Road

Delevan, NY 14042

T: (716) 492-0849

Hamburg Floor Covering

3882 South Park Avenue

Blasdell, NY 14219

T: (716) 825-0070

Hamburg Overhead Door, Inc.

5659 Herman Hill Road

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 649-3600

Hanes Supply, Inc.

55 James E. Casey Drive

Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 826-2636

Hanna Commercial Real Estate

344 Delaware Avenue, Suite 200

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 426-0601

HARCAT LLC

dba Boismenu Mechanical

390 Cayuga

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 959-9757

Harmco Fastener

4525 Broadway

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 871-1650

Hayes Construction Services Corp.

656 Genesee Street

Buffalo, NY 14211

T: (716) 768-0145

Haynes Construction

32 Progress Avenue

Seymour, CT 06483

T: (203) 888-8139

MEMBERS

Health Management Group

55 Dodge Road

Getzville, NY 14068

T: (716) 831-1800

Heart of the City Neighborhoods, Inc.

135 Delaware Avenue, Suite 503

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 882-7661

Heatwave Inc.

100 John Glenn Drive

Amherst, NY 14228

T: (716) 891-9283

Henley Executives LLC

237 Main Street

Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 310-4245

Herbert F. Darling Inc.

531 Fillmore Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 633-1125

Heritage Contract Flooring, LLC

29 Depot Street

Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 853-1555

Hertel Hardware & Plumbing Co Inc

250 Ramsdell Road

Buffalo, NY 14216

T: (716) 875-3900

Hey Builders Inc.

1001 Alleghany Road

Attica, NY 14011

T: (716) 937-6526

Hicks Daughtry LLC

4205 Capstone Circle

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 495-0582

Highland Acres Landscaping, Inc

PO Box 263

Eden, NY 14057

T: (716) 570-6513

Highland Masonry & Restoration, Inc.

33 Ransier Drive

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 712-0781

Hildreth Electric Inc.

PO Box 555

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 439-0518

Hillpoint Scanning, LLC

7001 Brandywine Drive

Derby, NY 14047

T: (716) 277-9297

Hoffman Hanafin & Associates, LLC

500 Seneca Street

Buffalo, NY 14204

T: (716) 842-0700

Hogan Glass, LLC 162 Colgate Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14220

T: (716) 822-2222

Hohl Industrial Services, Inc.

770 Riverview Boulevard

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 332-0466

Holler Excavating & Grading Inc.

590 Cayuga Creek Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 464-3771

Home Insulation & Supply Inc

154 Cemetery Road

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 681-0849

Hopkins Building Contractors, Inc.

12125 Gales Court

Chaffee, NY 14030

T: (716) 983-8878

Horizon Masonry Restoration, Inc.

4142 Broadway

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 895-9900

House Crafters

4063 Union Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 626-6777

House2Home Construction LLC.

11123 Genesee Street

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 604-2995

Hover Networks Inc.

475 Lawrence Bell Drive

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 650-5650

HRI Commercial Food Service

2360 Cherry Street

Erie, PA 16508

T: (814) 453-4747

Huber Construction Company, Inc.

136 Taylor Drive

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 681-8881

Huffscaping LLC

865 Walden Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14211

T: (716) 352-6425

Huron Plumbing & Heating Inc.

61 Fillmore Avenue Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 692-3950

Hurwitz Fine P.C.

1300 Liberty Building Buffalo, NY 14202 T: (716) 849-8900

Hybrid Building Solutions

850 Main Street Corfu, NY 14036 T: (716) 741-7416

Hydro X USA

400 Ingham Avenue

Lackawanna, NY 14218

T: (716) 425-8660

ICC Commonwealth 795 Wurlitzer Drive

North Tonawanda, NY 14120

T: (716) 634-3967

Ideal Concrete, Inc.

400 Kennedy Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 893-6122

Imperial Door Controls, Inc.

85 Oriskany Drive Tonawanda, NY 14150 T: (716) 877-4141

Independence Electrical Contracting Inc

2786 Hess Road Appleton, NY 14008

T: (716) 957-2271

Independent Contractors Guild of WNY, Inc

521 Cornwall Ave Buffalo, NY 14215

T: (716) 315-4228

Indoor Air Professionals, Inc.

800 Commerce Parkway Lancaster, NY 14086 T: (716) 683-3000

Industrial Power & Lighting Corp.

60 Depot Street

Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 854-1811

Ingalls Site Development, Inc.

297 Meyer Road

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 675-7051

Innovative Mechanical Systems

623 Young Street

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 692-0608

Insight Floor Covering, Inc.

2250 Military Road

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 864-7664

Integrated Construction Services & Solutions, Inc

PO Box 228 Buffalo, NY 14205

T: (716) 462-7979

International Disaster Management Inc.

3842 Harlem Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14215

T: (716) 817-0811

International Industrial Contracting Corp

35900 Mound Road

Sterling Heights, MI 48310

T: (716) 572-8797

International Masonry Institute

1305 Crest Lane

Oakdale, PA 15071

T: (703) 300-0109

International Stone Gallery

6251 South Transit Road

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 625-8400

Irish Companies 1444 Clinton Street

Buffalo, NY 14212

T: (716) 827-2727

Irish Jones Construction

1305 Bailey Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 628-0280

Iron Wolf Contracting LLC PO Box 1143

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 423-8665

Iroquois Construction Services

155 Commerce Drive

Lackawanna, NY 14218

T: (716) 822-8205

Irr Supply Centers 908 Niagara Falls Boulevard North Tonawanda, NY 14120

T: (716) 692-1600

Iskalo Development Corp 5166 Main Street Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 633-2096

Ivy Lea Construction, Inc 765 Walck Road North Tonawanda, NY 14120

T: (716) 875-8654

J & D’s Sealtech Corp.

138 Chandler Street

Buffalo, NY 14207

T: (716) 743-1017

J & J Total Solutions 69 Cedar Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 228-3734

J & R Specialties, Inc.

13661 Main Street

Akron, NY 14001

T: (716) 442-5040

J & S Mechanical of Buffalo, Inc.

211 Ayer Road

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 625-8114

J. Battista Construction Inc.

5525 Rogers Road

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 570-5025

J. Bognar Construction, LLC

PO Box 4

Sardinia, NY 14134

T: (716) 222-4082

J M Avino Builders, Div of Javion Builders Inc.

67 Wenonah Terrace

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 832-7184

J A Site Works 380 Willardshire Road Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 903-4022

J.M.M. Construction of WNY 11290 Walden Avenue

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 937-6714

J.R. Swanson Plumbing 413 103rd Street

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 283-3802

J W Swanson & Associates, LLC 11 Thielman Drive

Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 877-6900

Jameson Roofing Co , Inc 3937 Bayview Road

Buffalo, NY 14219

T: (716) 646-9494

MEMBERS

JBM Mechanical Services

1243 Military Road

Kenmore, NY 14217

T: (716) 332-0611

Jens Glass Company

2903 Lakeview Road

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 432-5464

Jerry’s Contracting

11878 Big Tree Road

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 998-6253

JFM Property Services LLC

PO Box 1135

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 523-8892

Jim Ando Plumbing Inc

4534 Clinton Street

Buffalo, NY 14224

T: (716) 771-3601

JLB Installations dba Pacific Pools

8533 Transit Road

East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 636-1480

JM Mechanical of WNY LLC

2680 Grand Island Boulevard

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 909-0910

Joe Basil ChevroletCommercial Trucks

5111 Transit Road

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 683-6800

Joe Hynes Plumbing Inc.

79 Grive Street

Buffalo, NY 14207

T: (716) 949-4580

John H. Black Company, Inc.

3370 Broadway Street

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 206-2391

John W Danforth Company

300 Colvin Woods Parkway

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 832-1940

John W. Stickl Construction Company, Inc

3952 East River Road

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 773-7344

Johnson Controls Fire Protection

6850 Main Street

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 633-8465

Jos A Sanders & Sons Inc PO Box 814 Buffalo, NY 14240

T: (716) 893-1470

Juniors Design Build Firm, LLC

7804 Bley Road

Eden, NY 14057

T: (716) 444-2932

Junk Escape & Demolition LLC 877 George Urban Blvd

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 339-9723

Junkluggers of Buffalo

45 Anthony Dr Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 901-5388

K & R Day Trucking 840 Bullis Road

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 655-0660

K & S Contractors Supply Inc. 1971 Gunnville Road

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 759-6911

Kamco Supply Corp

1300 Perry Street

Buffalo, NY 14210

T: (716) 823-3905

Kamholz Outdoor Living 5641 Seneca Street

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 982-1663

Kanaka Construction Management 2150 Wehrle Drive

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 580-7208

Kandey Company 19 Ransier Drive

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 675-7245

Kapanek Wealth Partners, Next

Financial Services

5930 Main Street, Suite 500

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 639-8180

Kee Safety, Inc.

100 Stradtman Street Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 896-4949

Kelco Construction Management PO Box 98

Clarence, NY 14031

T: (716) 759-7858

Kelleran Services Inc 4908 Parker Road Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 481-5779

Kelley Bros 101 Benbro Drive

Buffalo, NY 14225

T: (716) 684-8665

Kenneth L. Young Paving Inc. 632 Blairville Road

Youngstown, NY 14174

T: (716) 745-9985

Kim Industries 2205 Kenmore Avenue

Kenmore, NY 14207

T: (716) 436-2001

Kimil Construction Inc 493 Kennedy Buffalo, NY 14227

T: (716) 893-3660

King Brothers Construction LLC. 1745 Welch Road North Java, NY 14113 T: (585) 535-7526

King Konge Construction 295 Main St Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 912-2504

Kinley Contractors LLC. 2383 West Five Mile Road

Allegany, NY 14706 T: (716) 372-4534

Kirst Construction, Inc. 7170 Boston State Road

North Boston, NY 14110

T: (716) 649-0906

Kistner Concrete Products, Inc.

PO Box 218

East Pembroke, NY 14056

T: (585) 762-8216

Kitchen World Distributing Inc.

7370 Transit Road

Williamsville, NY 14221 T: (716) 688-1334

Klein Reinforcing 11 Turner Drive

Spencerport, NY 14559

T: (585) 352-9433

Knabuilders 57 Broad Street

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 692-3540

Kostusiak Coatings & Construction LLC

6091 Seneca Street

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 982-6190

Kraftwerks 92 Cooper Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 876-9000

KT Construction Services

50 James Street

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 525-1097

KTG Services LLC

7440 Boston State Road

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 536-4184

Kulback’s Construction

2 Wending Court

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 681-1600

L&W Supply

380 Dick Road

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 681-3285

L. J. Quigliano II, Inc.

2395 Lockport Road

Sanborn, NY 14132

T: (716) 731-9008

L. Phillippi, Inc.

9178 Jennings Road

Eden, NY 14057

T: (716) 572-0122

L.D.C. Construction Co., Inc.

1920 Baseline Road

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 773-7357

LaBella Associates

300 Pearl Street

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 551-6281

Lake Effect Painting & Co. Inc.

19 Waltercrest Terrace

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 697-8655

Lake Side Contracting Co., Inc.

1979 Harlem Road

Buffalo, NY 14212

T: (716) 681-6260

Lake View Lawns, Inc.

6131 Old Lake Shore Road

Lakeview, NY 14085

T: (716) 997-1347

Lakeside Sod Supply Co.

6660 Goodrich Road

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 741-2877

Lakestone Development, Inc.

17 Limestone Dr, Suite 2

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 631-1905

Lamparelli Construction Co., Inc.

590 Kennedy Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 891-8599

Lancaster Tanks & Steel Products 107 Dorothy Street Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 332-5928

Lancer Door & Glass 5205 Broadway Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 684-9161

Land Pro Mulching LLC

675 North Street

Arcade, NY 14009

T: (716) 474-6929

Landscape Associates of WNY Inc.

8401 Packard Road

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 731-6415

Largo Capital, Inc. 1605 Main Street

Sarasota, FL 34236

T: (716) 204-2218

Larkin Development Group 726 Exchange Street Buffalo, NY 14210

T: (716) 566-2990

Laubacker Enterprises, Inc (SDVOB) 528 62nd Street

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 579-6522

Lawley Insurance, Inc. 361 Delaware Avenue Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 849-8618

LCA Development, Inc. 478 Hopkins Street Buffalo, NY 14220

T: (716) 823-9645

LE Walbridge 3023 Walbridge Road

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 400-6144

LeChase Construction Services, LLC 451 Elmwood Avenue Buffalo, NY 14222

T: (716) 529-4723

LED Energy Solutions LLC

63 Park Club Lane Amherst, NY 14221

T: (716) 474-0543

Ledge Creek Development, Inc. 10100 County Road

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 741-3174

Lee’s Enterprise of WNY, Inc.

211 Davidson Street

Buffalo, NY 14215

T: (716) 931-2713

Lehigh Construction Group 4327 South Taylor Road

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 662-2151

Leisure Craft Pools

2 Lancaster Parkway Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 684-3100

Lelyn Property Development, LLC PO Box 725

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 714-5784

Len-Co Lumber PO Box 852

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 822-0243

Liberty Mutual Surety 5062 Brittonfield Parkway East Syracuse, NY 13057

T: (585) 732-7392

Life Safety Integrated Systems, Inc.

2133 Broadway Street Buffalo, NY 14212

T: (716) 200-4218

Linde Gas & Equipment 85 Great Arrow Avenue Buffalo, NY 14216

T: (716) 895-5601

MEMBERS

LINSTAR, Inc.

430 Lawrence Bell Drive

Buffalo, NY 14221

T: (716) 631-9200

Loewer Paving Inc.

PO Box 301

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 741-2913

Loudon Building Company Inc

26 Park Street

Springville, NY 14141

T: (716) 984-4166

Lougen, Valenti, Bookbinder & Weintraub, LLP

130 Bryant Woods South Amherst, NY 14228

T: (716) 204-9000

Louis Del Prince & Sons, Inc.

580 Cayuga Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 570-4525

Lovell Safety Management Company 22 Cortlandt Street 33 Floor rd

New York, NY 10007

T: (315) 800-3634

Lume Strategies, Inc.

500 Pearl Street

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 559-1418

M & C Utilities

155 Commerce Drive

Lackawanna, NY 14218

T: (716) 822-2142

M & M Electric Construction., Inc.

4819 Henry Avenue

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 297-7060

M & M Insulation, Inc.

2312 March Road

Eden, NY 14057

T: (716) 319-8159

M&S Enterprizes 12333 Liberia Road East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 863-0747

M&T Bank One Fountain Plaza Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 334-2598

M.I.S. of America, Inc.

4391 Walden Avenue

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 681-3758

M.K.S. Plumbing Corporation

19 Raniser Drive West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 675-5771

Mach Architecture

2000 Sheridan Drive

Tonawanda, NY 14223

T: (716) 424-2035

Mader Construction Co., Inc.

PO Box 420

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 655-3400

Malvestuto Construction Inc.

2043 Cayuga Drive Ext Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 946-2049

Mandon Building Systems, Inc.

84 Gunnville Road Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 759-8106

Manning Squires Hennig Co., Inc. 8426 Seven Springs Road Batavia, NY 14020

T: (585) 343-5365

Maple Hill Site, Inc.

265 Bowen Road East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 913-9880

Mark Cerrone Inc 2368 Maryland Avenue

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 282-5244

Mark W. Schiller Corp

20 Tannon Drive South Fairport, NY 14450

T: (585) 259-0275

Marketing Tech 2495 Main Street #220 Buffalo, NY 14214

T: (800) 591-5685

Marksmen Fence 10016 Trevett Road Boston, NY 14025

T: (716) 949-0259

Martins Blacktop 3354 Ely Niagara Falls, NY 14303

T: (716) 313-4547

Masters Edge, Inc. 3409 Broadway Street Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 651-0551

Matrix Environmental

Technologies Inc. PO Box 427 Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 662-0745

Matt Kolo Excavating 7008 Omphalius Road

Colden, NY 14033

T: (716) 860-0039

Matthew Kandefer Inc.

79 Fillmore Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 893-8376

Mazza Mechanical Services, Inc.

430 North 7th Street Olean, NY 14760

T: (716) 372-0091

McAllister Plumbing Heating & Cooling Inc.

3080 Amsdell Road

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 649-6377

McGuire Development Company, LLC

455 Cayuga Street Buffalo, NY 14225

T: (716) 829-1987

MEMBERS

MD Concrete & Masonry

149 Gunnville Road

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 523-8724

Melco Construction Services Inc.

3100 Commerce Parkway

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 332-4069

Melzers Fuel

1205 Lake Road West Frk

Hamlin, NY 14464

T: (800) 367-0203

Merit Apprenticeship Alliance, Inc.

6320 Fly Road

Syracuse, NY 13057

T: (315) 863-0383

Metalico Inc

127 Fillmore Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14210

T: (716) 823-3788

Metro Contracting & Environmental, Inc.

2939 Lockport Road

Niagara Falls, NY 14305

T: (716) 285-9280

MidCity Office Furniture

2495 Main Street

Buffalo, NY 14214

T: (716) 832-0138

Milherst Construction, Inc.

10025 County Road

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 688-9098

Millennium Construction, Inc.

8320 Quarry Road

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 299-7107

Miller Construction Services, Inc. 3305 Haseley Drive

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 731-6415

Millington Lockwood

3901 Genesee Street

Buffalo, NY 14225

T: (716) 633-5600

Milton CAT

400 Wheeler Street

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 341-7714

Milwaukee Electric Tool

166 Atlantic Ave

Rochester, NY 14607

T: (262) 606-7371

Mission Hills Construction LLC

4534 Clinton St

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 656-1270

MJ Mechanical Services, Inc

95 Pirson Parkway

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 874-9200

MLP Plumbing & Mechanical Inc.

3198 Union Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 681-6997

Modern Disposal

4746 Model City Road

Model City, NY 14107

T: (716) 462-7389

Modular Comfort Systems

207 West Huron Street

Buffalo, NY 14201

T: (716) 381-8813

Mollenberg-Betz, Inc.

300 Scott Street

Buffalo, NY 14204

T: (716) 614-7473

Monroe Tractor

5035 Genesee Street

Buffalo, NY 14225

T: (716) 681-7100

Montante Construction 2760 Kenmore Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14150

T: (716) 876-8899

Morris Masonry Restoration LLC

441 Bailey Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14210

T: (716) 894-0102

MPG Properties, LLC 1089 Davis Road

West Falls, NY 14170

T: (716) 432-8455

MTW Development of Medina, Inc.

11827 Million Dollar Highway

Medina, NY 14103

T: (585) 798-3095

Murray Roofing

600 Cayuga Creek

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 896-5555

Napier and Sons, Inc.

517 Brighton Road

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 832-9000

National Fuel 6363 Main Street

Buffalo, NY 14221

T: (716) 857-7000

National Maintenance Contracting Corp (NMCC) PO Box 258

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 285-1583

National Overhead Door Inc.

5880 New Taylor Drive

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 667-3500

National Trench Safety Co

12 Lancaster Parkway

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 949-2792

National Water Main Cleaning Co.

928 Broad Street

Utica, NY 13504

T: (315) 624-9520

NBT Bank

6460 Main Street

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 562-3253

MEMBERS

NCI Construction

616 Broadway Street

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 309-3100

Near Me Remodel, LLC

3380 Sheridan Drive

Amherst, NY 14226

T: (716) 598-4376

NEFCO Corp

411 Burnham Street

Hartford, CT 06108

T: (860) 290-9044

Neth & Son

146 Taylor Drive

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 685-3539

Netrio

303 Cayuga Road

Buffalo, NY 14225

T: (716) 632-5881

New Enterprise Stone & Lime Co., Inc.

500 Como Park Boulevard

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 826-7310

New Frontier Excavating & Paving Inc.

7003 Brown Hill Road

Boston, NY 14025

T: (716) 226-4298

New Heitz Site Services, LLC

8644 Buffalo Avenue

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 299-8885

New York Power Authority -

Niagara Facility

5777 Lewiston Road

Lewiston, NY 14092

T: (716) 286-6114

Newfane General Contracting LLC

PO Box 403

Barker, NY 14012

T: (716) 795-3887

NewGen AV 2075 Kenmore Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14207

T: (716) 480-7008

Newstead Homes & Improvements Inc.

214 East Avenue Akron, NY 14001

T: (716) 481-2772

Newton Concrete

188 Ellicott Road West Falls, NY 14170

T: (716) 821-9519

Niagara Coatings Services, Inc.

8025 Quarry Road

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 297-5834

Niagara County Center for Economic Development 6311 Inducon Corporate Sanborn, NY 14132

T: (716) 278-8760

Niagara Gutter Inc

6353 Everwood Court North East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 695-3500

Niagara Industrial Services

3507 Hyde Park Boulevard

Niagara Falls, NY 14305

T: (716) 803-0781

NickNats Landscape and Design of WNY

333 Selkirk Dr

North Tonawanda, NY 14120

T: (716) 998-1811

Nick’s Mowing Service LLC

187 Westminster Road West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 523-0219

NKM Contracting Inc.

510 Ellicott Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 440-6388

NOCO LLC

2440 Sheridan Drive

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 614-1243

Nordstrom Williams PO Box 224

Bemus Point, NY 14712

T: (716) 800-2219

North Forest Office Space

2829 Wehrle Drive

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 626-9764

North Star Supply Company Inc.

55 Thielman Drive

Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 853-7332

Northeast Diversification, Inc.

2 Cadby Industrial Parkway

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 681-8879

Northeast Property Works LLC

11380 Broadway St

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 704-0317

Northeast Window Tint

352 Hartford Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14223

T: (716) 875-5408

Northern Dreams Construction, Inc

400 Kennedy Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 332-3765

Northtown Auto

2020 Niagara Falls Boulevard

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 472-4851

Northwest Bank

375 Essjay Road

Amherst, NY 14221

T: (716) 242-9770

Nova Site Company

6 Lena Court

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 677-0435

Nowak Industrial LLC

145 Suzette Drive

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 803-4078

Numarco, Inc.

1021 Maple Road

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 652-9190

NW Contracting

3553 Crittenden Road

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 937-6527

Oakgrove Construction, Inc

6900 Seneca Street

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 652-2200

Oaks Construction and Dumpster Rental

230 Sawyer Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 875-6257

Oakvale Homes & Development

264 Union Street

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 200-2486

Occhino Corp

2650 Seneca Street

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 827-7000

O’Connor Mechanical Corp.

203 Fisher Road Lackawanna, NY 14218

T: (716) 824-2100

Ogre’s Insulation LLC

137 Collins Road

Lewis Run, PA 16738

T: (814) 598-8442

Ojibway Construction Corp.

PO Box 768

North Tonawanda, NY 14120

T: (716) 589-0675

Old Dutchman’s Wrought Iron, Inc

2800 Millersport Highway

Getzville, NY 14068

T: (716) 688-2034

Omar McDowell Co.

25109 Detroit Road

Westlake, OH 44145

T: (440) 808-2280

On Track Construction Inc.

1553 Center Street

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 866-2838

Oneida Sales and Service 155 Commerce Drive Lackawanna, NY 14218 T: (716) 822-8205

Operation Freedom Construction LLC

3750 Heatherwood Drive Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 913-0090

OSEA

3730A California Road Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 821-0091

Optimum Coaters

700 N Main Newark, NY 14513

T: (315) 359-7169

OSC Equipment Services, Inc.

1001 E Delavan Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14215

T: (716) 800-3333

Oza Inspections Inc.

PO Box 125

Lewiston, NY 14092

T: (716) 832-9513

P&G Services Group Inc.

986 Fillmore Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14211

T: (716) 545-9543

MEMBERS

P.A.T. Construction

Management Corporation

2457 Wehrle Drive

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 633-9933

Paint of WNY

2205 Hopkins Road

Getzville, NY 14068

T: (716) 863-1115

Painters Plus

800 Walck Road

North Tonawanda, NY 14120

T: (716) 693-7587

Palmer Supply Inc.

PO Box 356

Buffalo, NY 14218

T: (716) 525-5323

Parise Mechanical Inc.

1106 Sheridan Drive

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 694-4900

Pariso Logistics Inc.

3649 River Road

Tonawanda, NY 14051

T: (716) 289-0852

Park Place Installations, Inc.

255 Great Arrow Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14207

T: (716) 240-9779

Parkside Fire & Security

237 Highland Parkway

Buffalo, NY 14223

T: (716) 348-3800

Patriot Insulation LLC

10306 Jennings Road

North Collins, NY 14111

T: (716) 880-6810

Patterson-Stevens, Inc.

400 Sawyer Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 873-5300

Paul Davis Restoration

5763 Seneca Street

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 572-9707

PCS Plumbing & Heating

2286 South Park Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14220

T: (716) 822-4302

Peak Development Partners & Construction

3083 William Street

Buffalo, NY 14227

T: (716) 240-9177

Peak Site Development 5077 Tonawanda Creek Rd North Tonawanda, NY 14120 T: (716) 870-3883

Pella Window and Doors

558 Sonwill Drive

Buffalo, NY 14225

T: (716) 681-2000

Pepe Construction Co., Inc.

4085 Seneca Street

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 826-0400

Performance Cable and Drilling, LLC

62 Ransier Drive

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (585) 516-5181

Peterson Heating and Cooling

790 East Delevan Street

Buffalo, NY 14215

T: (716) 228-6140

Petschke Inc.

PO Box 234

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 937-4956

Phillips Lytle, LLP

One Canalside, 125 Main Street

Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 847-7057

Picket Fence & Exteriors

6695 Transit Road

East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 688-1672

Picone Construction Corporation 10995 Main Street Clarence, NY 14031

T: (716) 634-9994

Pignone Home Construction LLC

5969 North Drive

Lake View, NY 14085

T: (716) 913-5206

Pinelli Landscaping Inc. 4524 Clinton Street West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 656-1000

Pinto Construction Services, Inc. 132 Dingens Street Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 825-6666

Pipeworks Supply PO Box 1492 Lockport, NY 14095

T: (716) 264-7749

PKR Construction Services, LLC 11741 N Canada Street Holland, NY 14080 T: (716) 570-5159

Planned Futures Financial Group, LLC

300 Corporate Parkway Amherst, NY 14226 T: (716) 632-4200

Plant-IQ

3867 Ontario Drive

North Tonawanda, NY 14120

T: (716) 810-2859

Platinum Communication Services 1868 Niagara Falls Boulevard Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 629-3675

Play Surface Specialties

75 Elmview Ave

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 957-0380

Plum Impressions

330 Watson St, Ste 100 Buffalo, NY 14212

T: (716) 335-8105

PM Pavement Inc. 8905 Lapp Road

Clarence, NY 14032

T: (716) 637-8219

Praymen Electric

57 Minerva St

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 807-5076

Precision Caseworks LLC 110 Masten Ave Buffalo, NY 14209

T: (716) 249-7299

Precision Masonry 2931 E Church Street

Eden, NY 14057

T: (716) 992-8942

Preferred Seed Company | SiteOne Landscape Supply 575 Kennedy Road Buffalo, NY 14227

T: (716) 895-7333

Premier Concrete and Landscape of WNY 3045 Seneca Street West Seneca, NY 14224 T: (716) 406-6090

Prentice Office Environments 472 Franklin Street Buffalo, NY 14202 T: (716) 884-8452

Preservation Buffalo Niagara 617 Main Street Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 852-3300

Prime Time Energy Services, Inc.

67 Sheldon Avenue

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 685-4331

Pro Dock and Door

1492 Milestrip Road

North Collins, NY 14111

T: (716) 913-5630

Progressive Roofing

331 Grote Street

Buffalo, NY 14207

T: (716) 873-8711

Purtill Plumbing

3959 North Buffalo Road

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 662-1678

PUSH, Buffalo Neighborhood Stabilization Co., Inc.

429 Plymouth Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14213

T: (716) 884-0356

Pyramid Masonry

PO Box 194 West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 866-0782

Quackenbush Co., Inc.

495 Kennedy Road Buffalo, NY 14227

T: (716) 894-4355

Quaker Millwork & Lumber

77 South Davis Street

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 662-3388

Quality Structures Inc.

PO Box 60648

Rochester, NY 14606

T: (585) 647-2852

Qualprax Masonry

315 Colvin Ave

Buffalo, NY 14216

T: (716) 361-9325

Quermback Electric Inc.

215 Genesee Street

Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 856-6644

Quick Help Junk Removal

66 Fredrick Rd Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 292-9574

R & M Paving & Sealing Inc.

5574 Old Saunders Settlement Road

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 439-8351

R. Peer Plumbing & Heating, Inc. 10 Gooding Street

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 434-1212

R.A. Anzalone Electrical Contracting, Inc. PO Box 457 East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 625-4022

R.B. Mac Construction Co. 175 S Transit Road Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 433-2495

R.B. U’Ren Equipment Rental, Inc. 1120 Connecting Road Niagara Falls, NY 14304 T: (716) 283-4466

MEMBERS

R.B. U’Ren Equipment Rental, Inc.

1120 Connecting Road

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 283-4466

R.E. McNamara, Inc.

8615 Roll Road

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 741-4819

R.I.S.E. Sales Co., Inc.

8225 Stahley Road

East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 689-6194

R L Young, LLC/YA Group

4588 South Park Avenue

Blasdell, NY 14219

T: (716) 436-5560

R M Headlee Co , Inc

3649 California Road

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 662-9813

R W Painting Inc

65 Mid County Drive

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 662-3552

Rain For Rent - Branch 53

5626 Tec Drive

Avon, NY 14414

T: (585) 226-8280

Rainbow Glass Tinting Inc.

1101 Military Road

Kenmore, NY 14217

T: (716) 949-1865

Ray Brigham Concrete Construction Corp.

PO Box 566

Lockport, NY 14095

T: (716) 433-3615

Raymond E. Kelley, Inc.

33 Main Street

Bowmansville, NY 14026

T: (716) 684-3550

Reding Inc

431 Waverly St

Springville, NY 14141

T: (716) 260-9084

Regan Landscape

8490 Wolcott Road

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 573-1212

Regional Environmental Demolition, Inc.

6281 Wendt Drive

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 284-3366

Regional Heavy Equipment & Truck

6621 Dysinger Road

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 433-3373

Relentless Construction

15549 E Lee Rd

Holley, NY 14470

T: (585) 416-8346

Reme General Contracting

11732 North Canada Street

Holland, NY 14080

T: (716) 512-2189

Repp Construction Co , Inc

3810 Taylor Road

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 662-5605

Resetarits Construction Corporation

1500 Union Road

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 675-1082

Re-Steel Supply

2000 Eddystone Industrial Park

Eddystone, PA 19022

T: (610) 876-8216

Restoration Crew LLC PO Box 344

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 400-5555

RIBCO, Inc. 1032 Niagara Street Buffalo, NY 14213

T: (716) 883-1421

RIC Plumbing Inc.

5984 Dunnigan Road

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 625-8200

Richardson Management

26 Radcliffe Dr

Getzville, NY 14068

T: (716) 854-2400

Rich’s Sports Fields Inc. 110 Pavement Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 583-2284

Rickard General Construction, Inc

4919 Blacknose Spring Road

Sanborn, NY 14132

T: (716) 465-2493

Riefler Construction Products 5628 Maelou Drive Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 435-7663

Rigidized Metals Corporation

658 Ohio Street Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 849-4714

Riverfront Custom Design 200 River Road

North Tonawanda, NY 14120

T: (716) 693-2501

Riverview Contracting & Services, Inc.

172 65th Street

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 804-1982

RJ McCormick Construction 869 Lawrence Avenue

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 472-1842

RJM Contracting and Plumbing 8821 Porter Road

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 525-5377

RMDU Enterprises - Utech Basement 683 Mayrvale Drive

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 893-8801

Robinson Paving Inc. PO Box 266 East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 687-1045

Rochester Davis-Fetch Corp 175 Dodge Street Rochester, NY 14606

T: (585) 458-0150

Rodriguez Construction Group 683 Northland Avenue Buffalo, NY 14211

T: (716) 464-3257

Roman Construction Development 7298 Paddok Ridge Pendleton, NY 14120

T: (716) 946-6844

Romano Consulting Co Inc. 6396 Midnight Cove Road Sarasota, FL 34242

T: (716) 553-5594

Roofing Trade Services, Inc. 134 Rowlee Road Fulton, NY 13069

T: (315) 402-2803

RP Mechanical 7165 Genesee Road Springville, NY 14141

T: (716) 592-3067

RP Oak Hill Building Co., Inc. 3556 Lakeshore Road Buffalo, NY 14219

T: (716) 822-4966

Rupp Pfalzgraf LLC

1600 Liberty Building Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 854-3400

Russo Development

3710 Milestrip Road

Blasdell, NY 14219

T: (716) 844-8745

Ryan & Sons Construction, LLC

510 Limestone Ct

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 997-8150

S & S Site Development Inc.

PO Box 13

Holland, NY 14080

T: (716) 801-3011

S&C Companies LLC

449 Berryman Drive

Buffalo, NY 14226

T: (716) 465-1503

S&S Construction of WNY, Inc.

9450 Maple Street

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 741-4210

S. E. G. Construction, Inc.

3371 Harlem Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 602-9105

S J Kraft Company, Inc

1258 Jewett Holmwood Road

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 662-1524

S.B.Z. & Galle Stone, Inc.

482 Two Rod Road

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 913-4576

SafeSpan Scaffolding LLC

252 Fillmore Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 694-1100

Sahlem’s Roofing & Siding Inc

2260 Southwestern Boulevard

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 662-0062

SAMCO Technologies, Inc.

1 River Rock Drive

Buffalo, NY 14207

T: (716) 743-9000

Savarino Companies LLC

500 Seneca Street Buffalo, NY 14204

T: (716) 332-5959

Scarpone and Sons Inc.

1608 Richley Road

Corfu, NY 14036

T: (716) 997-3869

Schaefer Plumbing Supply Co., Inc.

146-160 Clinton Street

Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 853-2406

MEMBERS

Schuster Construction LLC

360 Gould Avenue

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 681-8847

Schwab Interior Carpentry & Construction Inc.

4966 Blackman Road

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 433-9649

SCI Telecom

5434 Genesee Street

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 681-4646

Scott Enterprises

120 Gruner Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 896-5867

Scott Hefferon Painting 2321 Niagara Rd #1 Ste 16 Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 343-3020

Scranton’s Thruway Builders Supply

3360 Walden Avenue

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 684-5600

Scrufari Construction Company, LLC

8426 Seven Springs Rd batavia, NY 14020

T: (716) 282-1225

SDVOB Veteran Dumpsters & Demo

3646 California Road

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 260-4932

Seneca Steel Erectors, Inc

611 Indian Church Road

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 592-3350

Sentry Metal Services

553 West Avenue

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 285-5241

ServiceMaster Restore

4444 Broadway Street

Depew, NY 14043

T: (585) 491-2999

Sessler Environmental Services

2558 Hamburg Turnpike

Lackawanna, NY 14218 T: (585) 617-5710

Shades Of Color 2075 Kenmore Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14207

T: (716) 912-1018

Shanor Electric Supplies LLC 1276 Military Road Kenmore, NY 14217

T: (716) 876-0711

Shelby Crushed Stone, Inc 10830 Blair Road Medina, NY 14103

T: (585) 798-4501

Shell Fab & Design, Inc. 3260 Clinton Street West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 827-3003

Sherwin Williams Paint Co.

2578 Walden Avenue

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 685-1444

Shingle & Gibb Automation LLC

355 Commerce Drive Amherst, NY 14228

T: (716) 548-5222

Sicoli Construction Services Inc

4800 Hyde Park Boulevard

Niagara Falls, NY 14305

T: (716) 205-0540

Siemens Building Technologies Landis Division

85 Northpointe Parkway Amherst, NY 14228

T: (716) 568-0983

Simmers Crane Design & Services, Inc.

365 Wheeler Street Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 332-0760

Sinatra Development Company 617 Main Street Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 220-8468

Singer/Kittredge Equipment Company, Inc.

17 Pearce Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 479-2371

Site Specialties, LLC

12658 Big Tree Road

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 913-8306

SJF Construction 2025 Attica Road Darien Center, NY 14040

T: (585) 547-9490

Skrlin Coating & Blasting 2901 Lockport Road Niagara Falls, NY 14305

T: (716) 284-4254

Skyworks LLC

100 Thielman Drive Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 822-5438

SNS Landscaping, Inc.

136 Northington Drive East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 534-5031

Southside Precast Products

1951 Hamburg Turnpike

Buffalo, NY 14218

T: (716) 825-9300

Spanitz Backhoe Service, Inc.

12516 Liberia Road

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 491-0496

SPI Specialty Products and Insulation

2101 Kenmore Ave

Buffalo, NY 14207

T: (716) 622-1015

Spray Tech Coatings Inc.

116 Lake Avenue

Blasdell, NY 14219

T: (716) 823-1122

Springville Door & Window Inc.

PO Box 286

Springville, NY 14141

T: (716) 592-9803

Spur Line Construction Corp.

11171 Alley Road

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 481-9668

Stadium Solutions, Inc

897 Winfield Road

Cabot, PA 16023

T: (724) 352-4258

Stark Tech

95 Stark Street

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 693-4490

Stately Kitchen and Bath LLC.

101 Jamison Road

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 913-7013

STC Construction PO Box 459

Springville, NY 14141

T: (716) 592-3400

Sterling Glass Inc

1415 Niagara Street

Buffalo, NY 14213

T: (716) 853-5800

Stimm Associates, Inc.

10 Katherine Street

Buffalo, NY 14240

T: (716) 847-0353

Stohl Remediation Services Inc.

3860 California Road

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 312-0070

Stone Creek Advisors

8899 Lake Glen Court

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 247-4448

Stoneworks WNY LLC

351 3rd Street

Youngstown, NY 14174

T: (716) 333-0136

Straightline General Contractors, Inc.

6771 Seneca Street

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 714-5656

Streamline Designs

3475 Niagara Falls Boulevard

North Tonawanda, NY 14120

T: (716) 255-2578

Strenkoski Brothers Construction

2453 Jagow Road

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 297-8221

Strokes Painting and Contracting PO Box 766

Getzville, NY 14068

T: (716) 491-1550

Structured WNY

11500 Transit Road

East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 602-2112

Strut Systems Installation LLC

103 Sycamore Street

Buffalo, NY 14204

T: (716) 332-6983

Sunbelt Rentals

1801 Union Road

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 393-7347

Sunoco (WEX Inc.)

1 Hancock Street

Portland, NY 04101

T: (646) 246-5491

Sunset Custom Homes Inc 3172 S Park Avenue

Lackawanna, NY 14218

T: (716) 955-0199

Superior Decks Inc 7661 Erie Road

Derby, NY 14047

T: (716) 864-4825

Superior Interior Coverings 487 Erie Street

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 270-7457

Surianello General Concrete Contractor

635 Wyoming Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14215

T: (716) 837-7710

Sutton Paving and Excavation Inc.

PO Box 253

East Amherst, NY 14051

T: (716) 542-1272

Swan Trucking West

77 West Drullard Avenue

Lancaster, NY 14086

T: (716) 681-3386

SWBR Architecture, Engineering & Landscape Architecture, D.P.C.

260 E Main Street

Rochester, NY 14604

T: (518) 618-0900

MEMBERS

Swiatek Studios Inc.

9670 Main Street

Clarence, NY 14031

T: (716) 597-6683

Swimco Mftg

6701 South Transit Road

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 625-9269

Switala’s Construction

9160 Clarence Center Road

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 741-6983

T&T Concrete, Inc.

2560 Hamburg Turnpike

Lackawanna, NY 14218

T: (716) 824-5292

Takeform

11601 Maple Ridge

Medina, NY 14103

T: (716) 225-2106

TDH Refrigeration Inc.

55 Boxwood Lane

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 668-1328

Tech Savvy

3768 Seneca Street

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 217-0704

Tedesco Construction Services

2760 Kenmore Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 807-8273

Telco Construction, Inc.

500 Buffalo Road

East Aurora, NY 14052

T: (716) 805-1520

Tele Data Com, Inc.

90 Airpark Drive

Rochester, NY 14624

T: (585) 527-0800

Terracon

70 Vantage Point Drive

Rochester, NY 14624

T: (716) 398-7040

Terry Mooney Construction

PO Box 26 Warsaw, NY 14569

T: (585) 786-3450

TF Plumbing

46 Highland Avenue

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 213-7716

TGR Enterprises

248 Lein Road

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 674-8303

The Bonadio Group

100 Corporate Parkway

Amherst, NY 14226

T: (716) 688-4343

The Business Council of New York State, Inc

111 Washington Avenue Alba, NY 12180

T: (518) 694-4463

The Environmental Service Group NY Inc

177 Wales Avenue Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 695-6720

The Krog Group, LLC

4 Centre Drive

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 667-1234

The Marrano/Marc-Equity Corporation

2730 Transit Road

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 809-8645

The Metro Group, Inc.

650 Mile Crossing Blvd

Rochester, NY 14624

T: (585) 232-6470

The MJA Company PO Box 501 Williamsville, NY 14231

T: (716) 831-7091

The Peyton Barlow Co., Inc.

360 Delaware Avenue Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 842-0630

The Pike Company 740 Seneca Street Buffalo, NY 14210

T: (716) 949-7646

The Pump Doctor, Inc. 2706 Hemlock Road Eden, NY 14057

T: (716) 992-3181

The R. E. Krug Corp. 190 Oliver Street North Tonawanda, NY 14120 T: (716) 692-2305

The Service CollaborativeWNY Youthbuild

173 Elm Street Buffalo, NY 14203

T: (716) 418-8500

The State Group Industrial Limited 100 Stradtman Street Buffalo, NY 14206

T: (716) 283-0620

The Upstate Bank 150 State Street Rochester, NY 14614

T: (585) 672-6695

The ZLC Group CPA’s LLC 634 Main Street East Aurora, NY 14052 T: (716) 204-1124

Thermal Foams, Inc. 2101 Kenmore Avenue Buffalo, NY 14207 T: (716) 874-6474

Thomann Asphalt Paving 56 Gunnville Road Lancaster, NY 14086 T: (716) 759-0430

Thomas J. Johnson Construction, Inc. 6435 West Quaker Street Orchard Park, NY 14127 T: (716) 662-1341

Thomas Johnson, Inc 4196 South Taylor Road Orchard Park, NY 14127 T: (716) 662-4575

Thomason Concrete Construction Inc. 3009 Norman Street Niagara Falls, NY 14305 T: (716) 285-9868

Tiede-Zoeller Tile Corp. 250 Sonwil Drive Cheektowaga, NY 14225 T: (716) 901-7365

Tipping Point Communications 505 Ellicott Street Buffalo, NY 14203 T: (716) 575-9162

T-Mobile USA, Inc 29 Windcroft Lane Lancaster, NY 14086 T: (716) 449-1040

Tom Greenauer Development PO Box 250 Springbrook, NY 14140 T: (716) 675-9434

Tom Rall Contracting Inc

2389 Whitehaven Road

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 583-4786

Tompkins Community Bank

1 Hopkins Road

Amherst, NY 14221

T: (716) 777-7308

Torino Mosaic Flooring

5178 Keller Road

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 941-3622

Toronto Construction Association

70 Leek Crescent

Ontario, Canada L4B1H1

T: (416) 499-4000

Toshiba Business Solutions

100 Colvin Woods Parkway

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 623-8180

Total Wrecking & Environmental, LLC

PO Box 326 Buffalo, NY 14231

T: (716) 692-2002

Tracey Trucking, Inc.

400 N Main Street

Holland, NY 14080

T: (716) 258-1765

Trademaster Plumbing Inc.

7278 Wilrose Court

Wheatfield, NY 14120

T: (716) 668-5851

Tradesmen International Inc.

2564 Walden Avenue

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 651-1990

Trane US Inc.

45 Earhart Drive

Buffalo, NY 14221

T: (716) 626-1260

Transit Construction Services

3181 Transit Road

Elma, NY 14059

T: (716) 656-7350

Transit Redi-Mix, Inc.

9775 County Road

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 741-8264

Transit Steel Buildings Inc.

2756 Transit Road

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 796-7470

Trautman Associates

37 Franklin Street

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 883-4400

TripleTrack HR Partners

6265 Sheridan Drive

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 639-8041

Tri-R Mechanical Services, Inc.

150 Empire Drive

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 674-0222

Tschetter’s Construction Corp

4560 Clinton Street

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 656-7311

Turf Tec Landscape Management

6279 Ridge Road

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 725-1900

Turf Tec of WNY, Inc.

5096 Lockport Road

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 625-8990

Turner Construction Company

50 Lakefront Boulevard

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 853-1900

UBS Institutional Consulting -

Upstate New York

400 Linden Oaks

Rochester, NY 14625

T: (585) 218-4558

UnderDogg Construction

3401 Lake Shore Road

Blasdell, NY 14219

T: (716) 341-3196

Uniland Construction Corp.

100 Corporate Parkway Amherst, NY 14226

T: (716) 834-5000

Union Concrete and Construction Corp.

435 Meyer Road

West Seneca, NY 14224

T: (716) 822-5755

United Business Systems, Inc.

316 Seneca Street

Buffalo, NY 14204

T: (716) 854-4122

United Mechanical Contracting Inc 1207 Delaware Ave Buffalo, NY 14209

T: (716) 602-3776

United Rentals

4811 Transit Road

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 565-1330

United Survey Inc. 25145 Broadway Avenue Oakwood Village, OH 44146 T: (440) 439-7250

United Thermal Systems, LLC 2939 Lockport Road Niagara Falls, NY 14305 T: (716) 285-0216

Universal Electric Services 54 Cimarand Drive

Williamsville, NY 14221 T: (716) 239-0976

University at Buffalo

119 John Beane Center

Buffalo, NY 14260

T: (716) 645-8977

Upstate Rebar

250 Lake Avenue

Blasdell, NY 14219

T: (716) 892-8434

Urban Insulation Corporation 8520 Sheridan Drive

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 634-5138

Urell

45 Timberlink Drive Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (617) 923-9500

US Traffic Control

100 Fire Tower Drive Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 695-9000

USI Consulting Group

300 Meridian Centre Boulevard Rochester, NY 14625

T: (585) 736-5957

USI Insurance Services

726 Exchange Street Buffalo, NY 14210

T: (855) 874-0123

Valleyview Enterprise 1 Main Street Lower Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 316-0289

MEMBERS

Vastola Heating & Cooling

3315 Abbott Road

Orchard Park, NY 14127

T: (716) 827-8652

VCNA United Materials

3374 Walden Avenue

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 213-5832

Venquois Electric LLC

11 Randy Dr

Akron, NY 14001

T: (716) 783-6188

Veteran Electrical Contracting Services Inc.

3590 Grafton Avenue

Blasdell, NY 14219

T: (716) 830-9106

Villani’s LLC

6405 Packard Road

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 299-1414

Vio Plumbing & Mechanical

5501 Camp Road

Hamburg, NY 14075

T: (716) 479-7261

Visone Construction, Inc.

79 Sheldon Avenue

Depew, NY 14043

T: (716) 681-7331

VisoneCo Site Development, LLC

9829 Main Street

Clarence, NY 14031

T: (716) 759-1715

VP Supply

2200 Harlem Road

Cheektowaga, NY 14225

T: (716) 895-2800

W.R. Meadows

207 Lafayette

Buffalo, NY 14213

T: (717) 792-2627

Walter S. Johnson Bldg. Co., Inc.

PO Box 688

Niagara Falls, NY 14302

T: (716) 283-8733

Wargo Enterprises Inc.

5055 Havens Road

Akron, NY 14001

T: (716) 542-1333

Wayside Nursery, Inc.

8962 Porter Road

Niagara Falls, NY 14304

T: (716) 297-3811

WBE Construction Services

1815 Love Road

Grand Island, NY 14072

T: (716) 773-7300

Weatherpanel Inc

285 Chandler Street

Buffalo, NY 14207

T: (716) 876-5400

Weaver Metal and Roofing, Inc.

40 Appenheimer Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14214

T: (716) 891-8844

Webster Szanyi LLP

1400 Liberty Building

Buffalo, NY 14202

T: (716) 842-2800

Weitz Maintenance Service Inc PO Box 747 East Amhert, NY 14051 T: (716) 998-1452

WellNow Urgent Care 5495 Sheridan Drive

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (585) 957-2563

Wendel

375 Essjay Road

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 688-0766

Wendt’s Propane and Oil 5910 Ward Rd

Sanborn, NY 14132

T: (716) 731-9826

Weydman Electric, Inc

747 Young Street

Tonawanda, NY 14150

T: (716) 692-7667

Whitecap 6515 Transit Road

Bowmansville, NY 14026

T: (716) 686-9123

Whitestone Associates, Inc.

116 Gruner Road

Buffalo, NY 14227

T: (716) 770-0078

Willett Builders 1728 Seneca Street

Buffalo, NY 14210

T: (716) 370-0018

Willey Well Drilling, Inc.

12870 Route 39

Sardinia, NY 14134

T: (716) 492-3930

William L. Watson Co., Inc

8064 N Main Street

Eden, NY 14057

T: (716) 992-3220

William T. Spaeder Co., Inc.

1602 East 18th Street

Erie, NY 16510

T: (814) 456-7014

Willscot 145 Canada Drive

East Syracuse, NY 13057

T: (315) 952-5078

Witnauer Trucking Co., Inc.

8050 Clarence Center Road

East Amherst, NY 14051 T: (716) 689-3090

Wittburn Enterprises, Inc. Ellicott Station Buffalo, NY 14205 T: (716) 856-6610

Wm. C. Rott & Son Inc. 454 Young Street

Tonawanda, NY 14150 T: (716) 694-8220

WMS Sales Inc.

9580 County Road

Clarence Center, NY 14032

T: (716) 741-9575

WNY Engineering & Construction Management

563 Richmond Avenue

Buffalo, NY 14222

T: (716) 495-1875

WNY Exteriors

PO Box 24

Spencerport, NY 14559

T: (585) 484-1830

WNY First Choice Construction

3080 Southpark Avenue

Lackawanna, NY 14218

T: (716) 392-8300

WNY Tile and Stone Corp.

139 Division Street North Tonawanda, NY 14120

T: (716) 957-3722

Wolcott Construction Services, LLC

2108 Krotz Road

Warsaw, NY 14569

T: (585) 549-6001

Wolf’s Nursery Inc.

6083 Fisk Road

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 625-8153

Woodsmith Fence Corp.

5610 Old Saunders Settlement Road

Lockport, NY 14094

T: (716) 433-1300

Working Knowledge LLC

435 Lawrence Bell

Buffalo, NY 14221

T: (716) 335-7855

World Wide Bonding Agency

2846 William Street

Cheektowaga, NY 14227

T: (716) 681-7685

YB Framing Inc. 1593 Sandridge Road

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 239-9447

Yellow Umbrella Creative LLC 5334 Riverside Dr Saranac, MI 48881

T: (616) 209-8465

Zacher Electric

30 Leo Place

Cheektowaga, NY 14224

T: (716) 839-9000

Zaepfel Development Co. Inc

5505 Main Street

Williamsville, NY 14221

T: (716) 632-7230

Zoladz Construction Co., Inc.

13600 Railroad Street

Alden, NY 14004

T: (716) 937-6575

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