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A Vital Expansion at
Pompanoosuc Mills
By Andi Diehn
photos by Steve Usle
Visitors entering the showroom at Pompanoosuc Mills
in Thetford, Vermont, may first notice the
furniture. Dining room chairs, end tables, rocking
chairs, audio centers, and cabinets in a wide range
of styles from classical to contemporary crowd the
floor and walls. The second thing visitors might
remark upon is the evident lack of space in which to
move.
“Our current showroom is about 800 square feet,”
says Dwight Sargent, owner and president of
Pompanoosuc Mills. “The new showroom will be about
11,000 square feet. A huge difference.”
The people of Pompanoosuc Mills produce high-quality
furniture for homes, offices, schools—and for anyone
else who appreciates beautiful furniture that
borders on art. For a business that started in a
garage over 30 years ago, this next stage of growth
is the mark of something more than success. It’s a
sign of deep commitment, an eagerness to see the
bigger picture, and a willingness to work extra
hard.
A Homegrown Company
“I started making furniture in 1973,” says Sargent.
“When I was, hmm, ten years old!” he laughs.
For about seven years, Sargent ran his company out
of Norwich, Vermont. “We moved to Thetford in 1980
or 1981,” he explains. “We just built the new
showroom over the sidewalk that had the exact date
in it.”
Pompanoosuc Mills now employs over 160 employees in
11 different showrooms in the Northeast, including
Philadelphia, New York City, and Hanover, New
Hampshire.
In the Upper Valley, Pompanoosuc Mills is known for,
in addition to high-quality furniture, being a
steady source of employment. Of those 160
Pompanoosuc employees, 110 work at the Thetford
location. “We have some people here who are hitting
their 30-year anniversary, and they’re only 45 years
old!” comments Showroom Manager Nick Porcello. “We
have a couple of father-and-son pairs working
together.” In addition to providing local jobs,
Pompanoosuc Mills also offers a job-shadowing
program for local high school students who are
interested in learning a trade. .
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Pompanoosuc furniture is sold exclusively through
Pompanoosuc Mills showrooms
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“Dwight
establishes a real tone of team effort,” says Ron
Bauer, Executive Vice President and part owner of
Trumbull-Nelson. “He’s very loyal to his workers.
Even the subcontractors working on the new addition
are all local. I don’t think any of them are from
more than 30 miles away.”
How does Pompanoosuc Mills stay competitive in the
face of cheaper imports from countries such as India
and China? “There’s more and more competition from
overseas, and that’s certainly a challenge,” says
Sargent. “People buy our furniture because of the
quality and the selection. They can choose the wood,
the finish, the edge treatment, the details. And if
their pieces ever get a nick, they can sand it out
without worrying about wearing through the particle
board.”
Pompanoosuc furniture is sold exclusively through
Pompanoosuc Mills showrooms; none of the furniture
is sold through wholesale businesses. While the team
at Pompanoosuc Mills welcomes specialized orders,
the company also produces its own line of original
designs. Sargent still does most of the designing,
even while traveling the country to meet with
prospective customers. People who are looking for
furniture unique to their lifestyle and living space
are sure to find something to match their palate.
The Plan to Expand
An elegant glass box now rises in front of the
existing Pompanoosuc Mills building, reminiscent of
a sophisticated, modern end table or a graceful
curio cabinet. A large bank of windows along both
entrance walls allows an abundance of natural light
into the showroom.
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The Thetford showroom now has 11,000
square feet, up from 800 |
There was
never a question of moving instead of building onto
the existing structure. “We own quite a lot of the
land out front,” says Sargent. “The Vermont planning
board knows we’re here for the long haul.” While the
company now competes on a national level,
Pompanoosuc Mills is embedded in the Upper Valley
community and remains an example of the Vermont
traditions of hard work, creativity, and ingenuity.
The new addition will be two-thirds showroom and
one-third warehouse space, adding up to about 15,000
square feet. “Right now we have finished furniture
piled up everywhere,” Sargent explains, sweeping an
arm to indicate a loading dock packed with furniture
in various stages of completion. Workers dodge each
other as they maneuver around awkward piles of wood.
“Having another four loading bays will allow us to
get the finished product out of the way so we have
room to make more, and the furniture will stay
safe.”
Green Building
“All the heat in the building is generated from our
own building waste. That’s tremendous,” says Sargent.
“I wanted to produce our own hot water as well, but
it would have taken a pump running at two horsepower
all the time, which would have been
counterproductive. It just wouldn’t have worked, in
spite of the fact I really wanted to do it. We also
generate one-tenth of our electricity through a
co-generator and turbine.”
As the use of oil becomes a sharpening global
concern, the people at Pompanoosuc Mills are doing
their part to promote energy independence. In
addition to producing their own fuel, workers are
conscious of the wood they use in the furniture and
where it comes from..
“Ninety
percent of the wood we use is harvested in Vermont
off land in the Current Use Program,” Sargent
explains. “Certified foresters regulate current use
land for the state. Most of it consists of family
lots, and they don’t want any pillaging.”
The Current Use Program was developed to enable
landowners to pay taxes on the land’s usable value
as opposed to its fair market value. In exchange for
paying reduced taxes, the landowner manages the land
according to a plan approved by the Vermont Division
of Forestry, and undergoes on-site monitoring by
county foresters. This program helps ensure that
Vermont’s rural areas stay healthy and beautiful.
Builders at Pompanoosuc Mills pay close attention to
where the wood goes in addition to where it comes
from. “We do not want to waste wood,” says Sargent.
“We have a wide range of furniture we’re working on,
so we can be efficient. We use longer lengths of
board on bigger pieces, and what’s cut can be used
for smaller pieces, such as dining room chairs.”
With its combination of local wood, local sweat, and
far-reaching vision, Pompanoosuc Mills is a true
Upper Valley company. And now, with plenty of new
space, they can reach even farther.
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