Genstar Development Company

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Genstar Development Company (Canada)
Type Private
Industry Real Estate
Founded 1950
Headquarters San Diego, California, United States
Key people Frank L. Thomas (CEO)
James Hammermeister (President)
Gina R. Papandrea (CFO)
Products Real estate development
Employees 30
Website www.genstar.com

Genstar Development Company (Canada) is a real estate development company that creates master planned communities throughout Canada. Genstar has a history dating back over 50 years developing thousands of acres into some of the most recognized communities across Canada.[1] Today, Genstar has active projects in Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Winnipeg and Toronto.[2]

Communities

Genstar currently has 16 communities with lots or properties for sale across four provinces. (Listed from west to east.)

British Columbia, Canada

Vancouver

Alberta, Canada

Calgary
Red Deer
Edmonton


Manitoba, Canada

Winnipeg

Ontario, Canada

Toronto

History

The company's origins date back to 1950 as BACM Industries founded by the Simkin Family in Winnipeg. In 1973, BACM Industries was sold to Genstar Corporation and was renamed Genstar Development Company. At that time, the Company operated in Winnipeg, Edmonton, Calgary, and Vancouver. Soon after, operations were added in Toronto and then Ottawa. In the late 1970s the Company also started operations in the United States.

In 1986, Genstar Corporation was acquired by Imasco Limited. By 1991, Genstar had active development operations in Minnesota, San Diego, Los Angeles, Portland, Tampa, Atlanta and Houston - all under the banner of Genstar Land Company.

In 1999, senior management orchestrated a management buyout and acquired the assets of Genstar in Canada and formed GDC Communities in the United States. GDC Communities plays two roles, it owns Genstar Development Company (Canada) and directs the development of its Canadian master planned communities, and secondly, it provides the foundation for the US investments and operations.[3]

External links

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.