O’Connor Nurseries Unveil 2.5 Acres of New Glasshouses
O’Connor Nurseries, one of the leading growers and providers of wholesale bedding plants in the South East, has unveiled an impressive 2 acres of new Glasshousing at its Gorey premises. The new Glasshouses, when added to the existing 1.5 acres, deliver a stunning 3.5 acres of state of the art glasshouses allowing O’Connors to provide plants across the region and compete head to head with foreign imports
Jim O’Connor and his wife Helen run the family business since they returned from America 14 years ago. Jim, who holds a diploma in horticulture, has grown the business year on year, adding new plants, opening new markets and always driving for better, more efficient methods of plant growth. The business employs six people on a full time basis and a further 10 or so during the busy growing season from March to June.
Investing in the new Glasshouses has been the most significant project the O’Connors have embarked upon and one which was almost dashed by the credit crunch.
Glass has a finite life span of approximately twenty years and the existing glass houses had only eight year’s left. As Jim explains: “We had been successful in growing our business and we decided that now was the time to put in the new glass – while we could maximise our growth and expansion plans.
“The new glass has many benefits outside sheer scale and increased room for plants,” explains Jim. “We have installed a green energy based bio fuel heating system as well as a plant management system. This allows us to automate planting, irrigation and even transport of the plants around the glasshouses.”
With the use of green energies and automated plant management, the O’Connors hope to be able to scale their business quickly while maintaining static labour costs. “Through the new systems, we shall be able to compete directly with overseas imports,” says Jim. “But even more importantly, we can offer Irish grown and nurtured plants of the highest quality. Sometimes imports have to survive up to 48 hours in boxes without light which means the plants end up poisoning themselves. Our product is grown in Irish soil and is of the highest quality. Moreover, our customers can reach us at the end of a phone or even come by and visit us. This gives them great peace of mind.”
Prior to the erection of the new glasshouses, the O’Connors had to rent glass as far away as Meath to keep up with demand. Having the space on site has reduced extra travel time and fuel costs in visiting and maintaining the external sites.
But as Jim explains, the new development was almost stopped by the credit crunch and only intervention by Gorey finance experts Horizon Financial saved the day.
“We were looking to raise significant funds and had secured in the region of a quarter of the overall capital investment through grants from the Department of Agriculture and SEI. However, while we initially had got a verbal ‘yes’ from the bank, come November, that turned into a ‘no’ and would not be moved. We were at our wits end since we had already spent a considerable sum on the preparation of the ground and the ordering of the specialist glass. It was looking like we had a white elephant and were going to go out of business.”
Help in the form of Horizon’s directors Hughie Doyle and Mick McGovern came just in the nick of time. Hughie led the recovery project and sat down with Jim to build a business plan. Once polished, Hughie then set up meetings with a select number of banks. The O’Connors were putting up their house as collateral as it had been previously mortgage free. The business plan addressed collateral, cash flow and repayment schedules. But it was still not plain sailing as Hughie explains.
“Typically, with the size of this investment, banks can look to cut down risk based on the appreciation of the asset being purchased. If the O’Connors were building a factory or outlet, the physical asset would increase overtime. However, in the case of the glasshouses, the minute they are erected, they begin to depreciate until they are essentially worthless in twenty year’s time,” explains Hughie.
“There are probably only a handful of similar glasshouses in the country and so financial institutions are not really familiar or comfortable with lending on such an asset,” he says.
In the end ACC bank came up trumps and took over the project. Within three months, the glasshouses were erected and planting began in time for the new season. “We could not have done this without Hughie and Horizon Financials,” says Jim. “Every way had been blocked. It was through their professionalism and commitment that the project was financed. Hughie even went so far as to sit down with us on a regular basis and work on our cash flows to make sure we stay on track. The level of detail and the extra mile they went to was phenomenal.”
Today, O’Connor Nurseries is one of the leading providers of Irish plants across the country. Both Jim and Helen have many challenges ahead of them, not least the requirement to increase sales by twenty percent in a recessional market. But with 700,000 plants leaving their glasshouses every year, they are both very optimistic. And if they need more money, they know who they’re going to call…Horizon Financial!