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Max’s son, [[Leonard N. Stern]], who joined the company in 1959, is the current Chairman and [[CEO]]. Constantino T. Milano is President and COO, and his son [[Edward Stern]] also works for the company.
Max’s son, [[Leonard N. Stern]], who joined the company in 1959, is the current Chairman and [[CEO]]. Constantino T. Milano is President and COO, and his son [[Edward Stern]] also works for the company.


A class-action lawsuit brought by Pam Rodgers can be seen at hartzvictims.org
A class-action lawsuit brought by Pam Rodgers can be seen at hartzvictims.org


==Energy efficiency==
==Energy efficiency==

Revision as of 07:24, 26 January 2016

A Hartz Mountain property in Ridgefield Park, New Jersey

Hartz Mountain Industries (HMI) is a private family-owned and -operated company known for its vast real estate holdings in the New York/New Jersey Metropolitan Area.[1][2] Its former parent Hartz Mountain Corporation (of pet products fame), was founded by businessmen Max Stern and Gustav Stern. Leonard N. Stern is owner, Chairman, and CEO. It is based at 400 Plaza Drive in Secaucus, New Jersey, in the Harmon Meadow Plaza retail shopping complex in the Meadowlands.

History

Max and Gustav Stern emigrated from Germany to the United States in 1926 with five thousand singing canaries (Harz Roller), and began manufacturing bird food under the Hartz Mountain brand in 1932. They later sold pets such as canaries, parakeets, hamsters, tropical fish, and associated supplies throughout the U.S. and Canada, and eventually introduced pet supply departments into more than 30,000 supermarkets in North America and the United Kingdom.

Known as Hartz Mountain Corporation (HMC), this pet products side of the Hartz empire, which had been owned and operated by the Stern family for 75 years, was sold to investment group J.W. Childs along with select HMC management in 2000, although for goodwill purposes it still retains the HMC name. HMC's new owners opted to retain its longtime Secaucus offices, so that HMC is now a tenant of the owners of the building, Hartz Mountain Industries (HMI). HMC was sold to the Sumitomo Corporation of Japan in 2004. In December of 2011, the Japanese pet and household products maker Unicharm acquired 51% ownership of HMC from Sumitomo.

Hartz Mountain Industries, which started as a real estate hobby for the Sterns, began construction of its first speculative industrial building in Bayonne, New Jersey in 1966, and made its first major land acquisition with a 750-acre (300 ha) tract of land in the New Jersey Meadowlands. HMI currently owns more than 1,800 acres (730 ha) of land close to Manhattan, and its real estate activities account for most of its business, with over 200 buildings boasting over 38 million square feet (3,500,000 m²) of industrial, commercial, office, retail and hospitality space. Its own in house staff manages, operates, and maintains its complete real estate portfolio.[citation needed]

Max’s son, Leonard N. Stern, who joined the company in 1959, is the current Chairman and CEO. Constantino T. Milano is President and COO, and his son Edward Stern also works for the company.

A class-action lawsuit brought by Faruqi and Faruqi LLP of New York, New York, on behalf of Pam Rodgers, et al regarding allegations of flea products causing injury and death of people's beloved pets can be seen at hartzvictims.org

Energy efficiency

Hartz Mountain Industries has made energy efficiency a high priority for its real estate portfolio and installed monitoring equipment, powered by utiliVisor software at several of its properties. The continuous energy oversight capabilities now possessed by Hartz property management staff have allowed them to dramatically decrease the energy consumed by HVAC.[3][4]

Former Hartz properties

Hartz Mountain’s businesses also included a publishing company, Harmon Publishing. Hartz purchased New York City’s alternative weekly newspaper, The Village Voice, in 1986, as well as other such periodicals in cities such as Los Angeles, Seattle, Minneapolis, Cleveland, and Orange County, California. The combined circulation of these papers was 950,000. In 1999, however, Hartz Mountain sold the publishing venture in order to refocus efforts on real estate, financial, and investment activities.[5]

Other Hartz Mountain holdings included the Carpet Magic Company, which manufactured and maintained carpet cleaning machine rental departments in 20,000 retail locations, and S.M. Cork, a leading general merchandise service distributor of the United Kingdom. Hartz also no longer owns these properties.

References

  1. ^ http://www.hartzmountain.com/history/
  2. ^ http://www.northjersey.com/news/after-transforming-the-region-hartz-is-looking-beyond-n-j-1.1154964
  3. ^ Real Estate Weekly (25 April 2007). "Hartz Mountain takes control with new energy system".
  4. ^ Real Estate Weekly (25 June 2010). "Hartz dedicates more greenbacks to 'green' initiative". Retrieved 13 January 2011.
  5. ^ Hartzmountain.com. "The Hartz Group History". Retrieved 2008-09-20.