Boost gives base for expansion

Nigel Frew at work. 119483 Picture: STEWART CHAMBERS

By CASEY NEILL

A SMALL business that started in a Tooradin shed 20 years ago has received a $195,000 boost to help it meet growing demand.
The Investing in Manufacturing Technology (IMT) grant will help Universal Shower Base grow four-fold over the next three years.
Marketing manager Adrian Barr said it was great to see the State Government supporting small business.
“It would be fantastic to see the financial community also support local manufacturers and not reward those that import,” he said.
“It would be great to see an emphasis on the financial community getting behind local business to grow and employ more people.”
Manufacturing Minister David Hodgett, visiting the facility in Elliott Road, Dandenong, earlier this month, said the cash would help the family business to buy and install new cold moulding machinery and infrastructure.
“This will increase exports by more than $1 million, create 51 new jobs and enable 13 existing employees to transition to higher duties,” Mr Hodgett said.
Project manager Rebecca Lowery’s father Richard started the business in 1992.
“My father originally used to manufacture out of a shed on his farm in Tooradin,” she said.
“Then the business grew and moved to a factory in Dandenong. I started working with my father in 2003.”
Ms Lowery said the team was excited to receive the cash and hoped this would be just the start of its growth – including a future in exporting.
Mr Barr said the company had a unique product which saved time and money.
“The shower base is a one piece, perfectly-formed floor which includes the correct fall and the waste outlet as one complete piece – not the sum of different parts and different trades,” he said.
“We reduce the trade requirement and we speed up the creation time.
“So rather than taking four or five days to create a shower floor, our shower floor is installed in a morning and can be prepared for tiling the same day.
“We remove that labour cost and that labour downtime and we get people back into their bathrooms faster.”
Mr Barr said the grant was game-changing.
“Because we have a unique problem where we’ve got a high demand but a low output,” he said.
“Now our output’s going to increase to meet demand and beyond.”
He said the business was determined to continue to manufacture in Australia.
“We’re a small, privately owned business so we’re reasonably dynamic and don’t have the constraints of the corporates – they have a tendency to look outside their manufacturing base,” he said.
“We’re conscious of the desire to grow our team internally.
“Most of the guys here have been with the business for quite some time. They like what they do.
“It’s a great team environment.”