I live in the Chino Valley in Southern California, this once was the most highly concentrated "Milk Shed" in the nation. The dairy industry peaked here in the early 90's. With 400,000 cows on 350 dairies all on 17,000 acres (wall to wall dairy land). When I bought into the landscape and construction business (also in the early 90's), I inherited some of the owners of the larger dairy operations (in this state and nation). These guys lived no where near their dairies (about 15 miles away), their homes were "mini mansions" in the foothills. They were no longer just dairymen, but bankers and land developers. My company "specialized" in the needs of large residential estates (large homes with even bigger lawns and lots of flowers). My growth plan for our company was to diversify into commercial property maintenance and management (that's 100% of business now).
Those dairymen became one of my companies best assets! In 1997 we converted one of our first dairies to a shopping center. It was the demolition of dairies that really got my attention, that there is a lot of money to be made in
scrap metal. Those dairies were more like milk factories, with lots of metal. All the good stuff too, stainless, copper, brass, aluminum and tons of steel. We sub-contracted the demo out back then, what I know now, that is one of my missed opportunities, but a lesson learned. Those dairies were all built in the early 60's, upgraded with total automation and "show case" facilities. I'm sure you will do well with your dairy demolition and I hope it works out with huge dividends for you.
The dairies here are almost gone, down to about 20 dairies with less than 15,000 cows. That 17,000 acres will eventually be built out, into more Southern California urbanization. The master plan calls for more than 50,000 new homes, millions of square feet of both retail and industrial property. With less than 500 acres of open space designated, this area will now be wall to wall pavement.
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