Reliance Foundry Co. Ltd. is a private company based in Vancouver, Canada. The company was founded in 1925, and constitutes one of Canada’s oldest metal casting supplier firms.[1][2]

Reliance Foundry
Company typePrivate
IndustryManufacturing
Founded1925; 99 years ago (1925)
FoundersH. G. Ireland, Ray McDougall, Mike Engelbeen, Gerry Engelbeen
Headquarters,
Area served
North America
Key people
Shane Kramps (CEO), Michael Dalzell (CMO)
ProductsBollards, bike parking, wheels, metal casting
OwnerShan Parmar
Number of employees
45
Websitewww.reliance-foundry.com Edit this at Wikidata

History

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Reliance Foundry was founded in 1925 in Vancouver, Canada, by Mike and Gerry Engelbeen, H. G. Ireland and Ray McDougal. The company constituted the first foundry in British Columbia to produce malleable iron, and in 1925 it received a contract to produce 225 cast iron streetlamp standards for the city of Vancouver.[3][4]

In 1927, Fred Done was hired to construct a one-ton electrical furnace, which led to the Done family's involvement with the company. Gerry Engelbeen died in 1928 and left controlling interest of the foundry to the three remaining partners. In 1936, Fred Done purchased H. G. Ireland's and Ray McDougall's shares, entering a two-man partnership with Mike Engelbeen.[5]

In 1938 the company worked with the Canadian Merchant Navy's Park Ships assembled at the West Coast Shipbuilders Ltd. (Allied Shipbuilders) Shipyard. In 1943 Fred Done became the sole owner of the company. In 1955, Done's sons, Brian and Barry, began working at Reliance Foundry, eventually succeeding Fred in 1963.

Reliance Foundry’s workers formed an official union on February 17, 1965 when they gained official certification with the United Steel Workers of America, Local No. 2952. In 1966, a fire forced the company to relocate from 149 West 4th Avenue to Surrey, British Columbia.[6]

In 1996, Reliance Foundry launched its first website, and in 1997 began outsourcing production to Asia. In 2003 all in-house casting operations ceased. A year later, Reliance Foundry sold their first Surrey location and transferred to its current location at 148th Street in Surrey, British Columbia.[7] By 2012, Reliance Foundry was supplying to businesses and communities throughout North America, and the company was awarded the Surrey Board of Trade’s Business Excellence Award for its economic performance.[8]

In 2014 Reliance Foundry purchased Bike Box Canada, launching its bike locker product line. In September 2016, the company made the Profit 500 list, a ranking of Canada's fastest growing businesses. In 2016, Reliance Foundry was named as a finalist in the Grant Thornton and Canadian Chamber of Commerce Private Business Growth Awards.[9][10]

In 2019, Reliance Foundry launched a new hardscape product line, including detectable warning plates, tree grates, and trench grates. All hardscape products are made from high-quality cast iron and withstand rigorous conditions with limited maintenance. Reliance Foundry hardscape products are designed and manufactured in the USA, in compliance with the Buy American Act.

References

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  1. ^ Bromley, Henry (1994). Fire in the blood : a history of foundries in British Columbia and Alberta. Vancouver: Asterisk Communications. pp. 105–108. ISBN 0-9698845-0-8.
  2. ^ "Decorative bollards improve building safety". American City and County.
  3. ^ "Specialty bollard business casts brighter future for Reliance after foundering foundry". Vancouver Sun.
  4. ^ "Reliance Foundry". Bloomberg.
  5. ^ Wanless, Tony (21 June 2017). "A reliance on re-invention positions third-generation company on solid ground again". Financial Post.
  6. ^ Unknown (28 July 1966). "A New Road to Industry". The Surrey Leader.
  7. ^ Ablett, Dave (6 May 1966). "Crowds Swarm Like Moths To 3-Alarm Fire". The Vancouver Sun.
  8. ^ Unknown (20 November 2012). "SBOT's Surrey Business Excellence award winners". The Now.
  9. ^ "288 Reliance Foundry Co". www.profitguide.com. Archived from the original on 2016-09-21.
  10. ^ "Private Business Growth Award Gala". Chamber.ca. Toronto, Ontario: The Canadian Chamber of Commerce. November 2016. Archived from the original on 2016-11-17. Retrieved 2018-03-04.
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