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Return to Virginia Business - July 2004

Cover story

A time to reflect
At Bay Mechanical, founder steps back after brush with death

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by Lynn Waltz
for Virginia Business

July 2004

In 1963, Rod Rodriguez was 19 with a baby on the way and a weekly paycheck of $42.35. Today, the 59-year-old owner of Bay Mechanical Inc. is wealthy. In 1980, when Rodriguez and a partner launched their mechanical contracting firm, they grossed $225,000 the first year. In 2002, the Virginia Beach company pulled in about $45 million.

Today, says Rodriguez, sitting behind his black metallic-flecked granite desk, it’s time to start handing over control to a new generation. Hard words for a driven perfectionist who transformed Bay Mechanical into a leader in mechanical infrastructure in the Southeastern United States. It’s difficult to gaze over any cityscape in the state and not see a building whose inner-workings were built and installed by Bay Mechanical.

The company’s 450 employees will still tackle challenging projects, but Rodriguez is choosing a slower pace after double pneumonia and a sucker punch of bacterial infections left him near death last January. The man who walked out of the hospital had different priorities than the one who had walked in 36 days earlier. “It made me realize that I’m 59,” Rodriguez says. “And I have worked so hard and taken on so much with boards, city work, charities, fund-raisers. I started letting somebody else take over.” While Rodriguez doesn’t want to be as involved in every single project, he looks forward to spending more time with customers and building owners, much as he did in the early days.

Bay Mechanical will continue its legacy of taking on big jobs. Past projects include Nauticus, Virginia Beach Marine Science Museum, Children’s Hospital of the King’s Daughters, MacArthur Center Mall, the Norfolk Southern Tower and the Virginia Air and Space Museum. A team of three long-time vice presidents, including Rodriguez’s son Michael, Al Ward and Jeff Cash, will oversee operations.

Never a micro-manager, Rodriguez encourages creative freedom, personal respect and a team approach that will sustain the company, he believes. “I never raised my voice. I don’t chew people out.”

Rodriguez has a slow, easy way about him, a dignity, and an understated smile in his crinkling eyes. He presents a calm, confident demeanor. Never let them see you sweat. Always deliver on time. Always deliver a quality product. But inside, he admits, was too much stress. It’s not a life he wants for his vice presidents. “I don’t want them to have to do what I’ve done,” Rodriguez says. “So we want less volume with better margins. It’s a lifestyle choice.”

Growing up in Chesapeake, Rodriguez burned with inner drive. By 11, he was stocking grocery shelves and hasn’t stopped working since. As a teenager, he kept his car immaculate. Right out of high school, he tackled the plumbing trade, digging ditches, learning pipefitting, dead-set on mastering each job. By 23, Rodriguez was running Parker/Sparks Inc., a Virginia Beach mechanical contracting firm with 40 employees. At 35, he launched Bay Mechanical.

From the start, Rodriguez focused on complicated hospital systems. His first contract was installing lights in operating rooms at Virginia Beach General. He found his niche because not many companies bid on the exacting standards of medical systems. Today, Bay Mechanical is installing the mechanical infrastructure in the medical tower at the University of Virginia Medical Center, including medical gas piping for surgical procedures.

A turning point came in 1994 when the company won the bid on Ericsson Stadium for the Carolina Panthers in Charlotte, N.C. One year later, the company built its new 220,000-square-foot headquarters on 23 acres near Lynnhaven Mall. This facility produced the largest sheet-metal job on the East Coast, 2.5 million pounds of ductwork for the EPA’s science and research center in Raleigh, N.C.

Over the years, one of the company’s biggest challenges has been the lack of skilled artisans. To cope, Rodriguez revolutionized procedures, leveraging skilled labor by integrating prefabrication. “I put the older craftsman with five people under them, each one doing part of his job,” Rodriguez says. The systems are built in-house, then numbered, dismantled and rebuilt on site.

In many ways, Rodriguez’s values haven’t changed. He’s always followed the Golden Rule, giving more to charity than he can remember. He has served on dozens of boards for business, cultural and philanthropic organizations. He still loves nice clothes, fancy cars and Cigarette boats. But, he says he found out money isn’t everything. “Anyone starting a business has to remember. It’s good now, but it may not stay that way,” he says.

For Rodriguez, it’s a time of reflection. His greatest accomplishment? “That my son lives on one side of me, my daughter on the other with my two grandchildren and my mother a short drive away. It’s having a close family.” It’s a good life, he says, one to be savored.

 

 

Return to Virginia Business - July 2004


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