Casey Scherrer, Jeannie Zuehlke

I began doing flowers in 2012 while she was teaching at a Montessori school. I would wake up hours before school each day to make runs to the wholesaler, and work in the basement until it was time to go teach at school. Later I would return to my home studio and continue working on the flowers for friends’ weddings, birthday parties, and small events. While all of this was happening, I met Jeannie in Montessori teacher training while we were working toward our certification. Read more>>
Tanya Melnyk

Soon after graduating I began working in the Chicago area as an associate dentist for a large dental group. During this time, I had the opportunity to expand my knowledge and expertise, while enhancing my skills and techniques. I felt comfortable in the care I provided but desired more in cultivating relationships with my patients. In 2017, I purchased Smileworks Center from Dr. Lani Basco, a well-regarded dentist, who had created a patient culture that was unique and based on genuine relationships. Read more>>
Kerry Maiorca

I’m not one of those yoga people who thinks everyone MUST do yoga. I love it and it has been my go-to self-care routine for 20 years now, but I know it’s not for everyone. However, I firmly believe that anyone CAN do yoga, no matter how fit, flexible, or experienced they are. That’s the “why” behind Bloom. My husband and I opened the studio in 2004 to create a place where people of all ages and stages of life could get into yoga without feeling intimidated. Read more>>
Mary Hayes

My professional background is in event planning, and I currently plan internal events for the Art Institute of Chicago. I took my first calligraphy class during a cold Chicago winter, in an attempt to learn something new and creative (and indoors!) that could also help elevate our museum events. I was instantly hooked, and spent countless hours practicing with various inks, pens, and nibs, trying to hone the craft. As friends and family started to see more of my work, they told their friends who told their friends, and I began addressing wedding invitations and creating custom projects for local Chicagoans and clients around the country. Read more>>
Mary Thuermer

I’ve always been interested in health and a more holistic approach to healing. In 2009, I decided to go back to school to study Oriental medicine and received my Master’s degree in August of 2012. Just as I was about to start my practice I was diagnosed with breast cancer and had to put off starting my practice until I went through treatment. 2013 was a tough year, but in November of that year I finally opened Beautiful Life Acupuncture in downtown Evanston and now have the opportunity to help people and do what I love. Read more>>
John Tsiaousis

I got my first job at 16 years old as a bag boy at Dominick’s Finer Foods and worked there through high school. After high school a friend of mine help me get a job at a health insurance company. Which was great as the pay was much better with more conventional hours than a grocery store. I had worked there a couple of years and left as there was always rumors of the company being sold to bigger carriers who already had their own staff. I had another friend of mine who worked at Swedish Covenant Hospital and help me get a similar job. Read more>>
Catherine Zwergel, Tracy Walsh, and Thomas Zwergel

Each individually pursuing goals of good health and well-being we came together organically, two siblings and a spouse. We envisioned a place where we would one day be able to share our vision of wellness with others. This idea evolved into Lighthouse Yoga & Acupuncture: a safe haven where everyone, regardless of age or level of practice, can participate in the process of wellness through the knowledge and experience of our teachers and practitioners. As any small business owner knows, you have to be all things to all people: the savvy business person, the PR expert, the web designer (luckily we’ve had expert help there!), the troubleshooter… it’s challenged us all in different ways, but ultimately being three people bringing different skills to the table, we have managed, and excelled, for nearly five years! Read more>>
Valerie Chalcraft

While in college at the University of California, Berkeley, I became interested in the abnormal behavior of animals that results from captivity. After college, I worked for a group of psychologists who studied animal welfare and the ways humans use animals. I realized that if I were to advocate for animals, I needed to learn about how a variety of species perceive and interact with their environments. So I enrolled in the Experimental Psychology program at the University of Nevada, Reno. Psychologists like myself seek to apply unifying principles of learning across species (including humans). Read more>>
Terry Opalek and Michael Frontier

In 2003, after completing the 12 week course “The Artist’s Way” I resigned from my 20 year career. At 45 years old I wasn’t sure what was next, but I knew that I wanted to live a more creative and fulfilling life. Nine months later Michael and I founded Terry’s Toffee. The next 13 years were filled with more challenges, opportunities and deeply meaningful lessons not only about business, but more importantly about life. In the fall of 2015 we achieved our intentional goal and sold Terry’s Toffee. What’s next? It’s not a question, it’s a directive, “What’s next!” Read more>>
Jordi Kleiner

I’ve always been fascinated by the act of learning – What happens neurologically when we learn to read? When we finally understand and apply a new math concept, what was different than the previous attempts? I decided to come to Chicago to pursue my own education and further others’. After a Masters and Doctoral Degree at Northwestern University in the field of Learning Disabilities, I chose to take the understanding that our field had cultivated through peer reviewed research and share the cutting edge best practices with children, adolescents, and adults that could use it most: those with dyslexia, other learning disabilities, and wider neurodevelopmental needs. Read more>>
Michael Jaurigue

We started back in 2016 with a mission. To get us jobs that we would love going to everyday. When brainstorming up what to do, I realized that our true happiness comes from our dog Sparky! That’s when it hit me, let’s make a dog walking company! But not just any dog walking company, let’s make on that makes a difference. A long time ago I used to work for this company that sold puppies, it was terrible and hard to see them not find homes. I thought about how we adopted our Sparky and the steps it took to get there. I thought about how much happiness Sparky has shown to me and my family and right there, that’s when it hit me. Read more>>
David Jacobson

I came from a funeral home family in upstate New York. I was exposed, by example, to an environment of assisting others and serving others within a community. I went to Xavier University and Cincinnati College of Morturary Science. I was planning to continue on with an MBA, but I ran out money. I got a job at Piser Weinstein Menorah Chapels in Chicago. I started as an intern. Piser was family owned at that time and several of the older members of that staff as owners, as well as some others I met through those owners have served as my mentors and assisted me personally and also in truly understanding daily operations within a business. Read more>>
Nick Bacon

Mainstream Media started back in 2013. My co-founder, Andrew Mausert-Mooney, had just graduated from UIC’s MFA in Moving Images program, and I had been freelancing as a video producer since moving to Chicago in 2011. We jumped into business together because we’d been producing each other’s films since meeting as undergrads at the University of Virginia, and figured we could produce films for other folks as well. What we quickly realized is that Chicago has a tremendously talented pool of young, hungry video producers, thanks largely to the numerous college programs in the area specializing in production. Read more>>
Gulia Adams

Gulia, who was born in Moscow Russia and immigrated to the US in 2000 when she was 20, has always loved animals, especially dogs. After many trying many jobs Gulia became a bather for a larger dog services business in Atlanta Georgia. After meeting her future husband, Bob, a Chicago resident, Gulia moved to Chicago in 2008 where she attended, and graduated from, the Dog Grooming Academy in Schaumberg. To gain more experience, before attempting to open her own store, Gulia was a grooming manager for Petco for several years. Read more>>
Lisa Souter

I’m a first generation American born and raised in NY. At Georgetown University (MSB ’97), I co-founded Uncommon Grounds cafe to fill the need for a coffee shop on campus. While an investment banker at Merrill Lynch, I co-founded the Client Coverage Group, which helped cross-market the different products and services the firm had to offer. And while at Harvard Business School (MBA ‘04), I co-founded the Boston chapter of Minds Matter, a non-profit dedicated to helping bright, motivated high school kids from low income families achieve their dream of attending college. Three years later, I did the same in Chicago. Read more>>
David Zak

I was teaching high school at Benet Academy in Lisle when I said to my class what my mother had told me – ‘you are the captain of your own ship and can sail anywhere you want.’ One of the students raised her hand and, knowing I wanted to work in Chicago Theater professionally said ‘If you can do anything you want, why are you teaching us?”
I turned in my resignation the next morning and feel blessed to have worked in film and theater for 35 years in Chicago and around the world. Read more>>
Hilaire Lockwood

I found my yoga at 18, studied 13 years with Maty Ezraty and Chuck Milker at The original Yoga Works in Santa Monica. Training, 2 babies later a move home to Mi. Made sense. We were set to open my studio in August if 2004, and I was diagnosed with metastatic resistant thyroid cancer in June. I was given 6 mos. as I was in the 1% of survival. I asked my family, teachers to still open. We did. 5 radical neck dissections and lymphectomies, 2 trips to MD Anderson, 6 mos. a second time. Between my third and fourth surgeries my little brother was brutally murdered. Read more>>
Peter Patterson

I have a full Service glass blowing studio. I create my own work, I teach individuals and group classes on all levels, I also have a full line of Memorial Keepsakes. That’s where we take the cremain ashes and put them into beautiful glass art keepsakes. I also have a web site that people can purchase items from. I have also created “Glo-Glass”…where I can put a formula of different earth elements into the hot glass while creating them and after they are finished…they will Glo-in-the-Dark. I put this into many of my pieces and it’s been very popular. Read more>>
Gus Menary

In 2008, I was a directing major under Sheldon Patinkin’s tutelage at Columbia College Chicago. As part of an assignment to design a fictional theatre company, I was paired with my friend Kaiser Ahmed. We then brought in our friends AJ Ware and Andrew Swanson and completed the assignment with flying colors under the banner of Jackalope Theatre. It seems a little silly now, but I think when looking down the well-trodden career path of a theatre director, we saw little opportunity to create the work we were interested in. At least, in the near future. Read more>>
John Frank

The 2nd Act Players officially incorporated as a not-for-profit theater in 2015, but our roots go back to 2012 when I was forced to have heart surgery to open a severely blocked artery leading to my heart. That near-death experience convinced me to start doing some of the things I had said for years that I would do “someday.” Someday had become now for me. One of those endeavors I had planned to do was to write stage plays based on various events in my own life. Read more>>
John Marino

As a young adult I experienced the usual ups and downs of life, but my transition into adult hood was met with much difficulty. The sudden stressors of paying bills, juggling classes and trying to start a career as a musician left me knocking at the door of the doctor’s office. After a diagnosis of depression and anxiety, I felt like there must be another path. I spent many years searching through doctors, chiropractors, yoga instructors and meditation coaches. Read more>>
Brenda Didier

I started dancing at age 8, professionally at age 16 and started teaching at the studio I started training with at age 23. Mrs. Campbell had a small neighborhood dance studio in Lincolnshire, Illinois. Her studio was in her small ranch home divided by a divider with her kitchen. She ran that school successfully for about 28 years. After she suffered a stroke, she asked me to teach for her. I continued that until she had to close her school and move into a nursing home. There were about 40-60 students with nowhere to go. My father suggested we rent space at a local gymnastics center for 6 months and see how it went. Read more>>
Hannah Lura Helford

When I was a child, I didn’t listen to anyone, I only did what I wanted to do. I had so much energy for life! I loved big and lived big and followed my heart’s desire! My parents are love-filled-worry-warts and were terrified that my boundless will would get me into trouble in life. My family are education-centered, my dad is even a professor, and they followed the belief that if you don’t succeed in school, you don’t succeed in life. Needless to say, school was placed as the top priority. Read more>>
Lori Lipptz and Alex Koffman

In 1983, after singing with other bands, I founded the Maxwell Street Klezmer Band. I had a specific vision of a group that would be in the tradition of Eastern European klezmer bands–playing at Jewish weddings and celebrations–but also of a concert touring and recording quality. From that time till now, I have been the artistic director of the band. In the 1990s, my musicians and I began focusing on the continuity of the music, and how to make the klezmer revival permanent. Read more>>
Anthony Moseley

In 1995, I decided to pursue my passion and dedicated myself to being an artist to celebrate life and humanity. I started as an actor and got cast in Collaboraction’s third show. In 1999, I became the Artistic Director and my first production was the first SKETCHBOOK Festival, a multi-medium festival of short plays, music and visual art. SKETCHBOOK created a new environment and audience for theatre in Chicago while cultivating new artists and we took off, along the way, I married my closest collaborator, Sandra Delgado and we built careers together as the first working artists in our families’ history. Read more>>
Elizabeth Williams

I moved to Chicago 12 years ago from Denver, CO. I was touring possible apartment options with my husband (just a boyfriend then) and we went into this great, historic high-rise called the Fisher Building. It was built in 1892 by Daniel Burnham and was every dream of mine come true. I always wanted to live in a historically significant building and just had to sign a lease there. I did not have a job lined up for our impending move. I was 23 years old and thought I would just interview at a plethora of businesses. Naivety was my blissful ignorance. Fortunately, a regional director was covering the office there that day due to her entire on-site staff being sick with the flu. Read more>>
Esther Lim

I bought Dr. Anthony Trotta’s dental office with a partner in year 2012. It has been 5 years since my partner and I started this practice and ever since then it has been continuously growing. Now we not only provide general dentistry but also periodontics, orthodontic, implant surgery as well as cosmetic dentistry such as veneers, whitening, Botox and filler. We had to do some major remodeling since we took over the old fashioned dental clinic. It took a lot of patience but at the end it became all worth it by providing top dental technology such as implant surgeries and orthodontic procedures and laser treatment. Read more>>
Mitzi Labant, L.Ac. and Andrea Friedman Ishikawa, L.Ac.

Andrea Friedman Ishikawa, L.Ac. and Mitzi Labant, L.Ac. have been the best of friends for the past 30 years and have been business partners for half that time. We are the proud co-owners of Healing Spring Acupuncture Center in Glenview, Illinois. Our center is a place where our patients can come to replenish their health in a safe environment using gentle acupuncture, herbs, diet and lifestyle guidance. We both have strong foundations in Traditional Chinese Medicine and the energetics that makes for a powerful force for healing the body, mind and spirit. Read more>>
Dr. Steve Best

The practice was bequeathed to me by the Chairman of Neurology at Chicago Medical School – he had started the practice about 30 years earlier as an extension of his University-based practice. We provide care for people with Psychiatric, Neurological, Pain, and Developmental Disorders. Our niche is the evaluation & treatment of people with treatment-refractory illness (such as the 50% of people who do not recover from depression or concussion or pain or stroke). In that role we expect to find the co-morbidities that are “factors” in non-response to treatment, and then we devise strategies to address those factors and hopefully turn non-responders into responders who can recover from disabling afflictions. Read more>>
Jeffrey P. Feffer

I was born in New Jersey, but moved to Los Angeles when I was 10. I graduated from UCLA with a Bachelor’s degree in Bacteriology, and continued my studies at UCLA and received a Master’s degree in infectious disease epidemiology. I was planning to apply to medical school, but I was influenced by my then girlfriend’s father to apply to dental school instead. He was very well respected in his field, and an international lecturer in dentistry. He truly enjoyed his career, and his explanations of the type of work he did, coupled with his enjoyment of the long standing patient-dentist relationships he created encouraged me to go in this direction. Read more>>
Michelle Herzog

My path towards becoming a relationship and sex therapist started when I was taking an introduction to Psychology class at DePaul University. In that class, I was introduced to two fields of therapy I knew nothing about; marriage and family therapy and sex therapy. As someone who has always been fascinated by the intricate dynamics of human relationships, I did a little digging and made the decision to pursue a career in both fields. It was the best decision I had ever made. Read more>>
Dr. Lowell Weil, Jr.

Dr. Lowell Weil, Sr. started our organization in 1965. At the time, Podiatry was not considered mainstream medicine. Lowell, Sr. was at the forefront in advancements in Podiatry and foot and ankle surgery. He invented many surgical procedures over the years that are now utilized worldwide as the standard of care. He became known as the Podiatrist of the Stars in Chicago, treating many famous people including the Mayor, Anne Landers, Jerry Garcia, and professional athletes. Read more>>
Joslyn Jelinek

I have been a psychotherapist and social worker for 20 years and have enjoyed working with all of the complexities of human stories and struggles. I worked for the Cook County Hospital System for many years before starting my own private practice. We specialize in perinatal mood disorder that explores the time of pregnancy and postpartum. Also, we are credentialed in substance abuse and really enjoy watching people emerge for the darkness of drug and alcohol addiction to a sober life. Read more>>
Amy Mayer

I previously owned two companies, ExpressDrop and LuxuryDrop, selling a myriad of items for individual sellers on eBay as well are designer overstock supplied by retailers. We operated out of three locations in Chicagoland. Although after five years I closed these businesses I remained interested in the secondary marketplace for luxury items made accessible by any number of outlets online. Additionally the idea that items in excellent condition were being discarded simply because people didn’t realize they could be reused is something I am very passionate about. Read more>>
Patrick Aniol

Our company was formed when we realized that lots of window companies were doing mediocre work at extremely high prices, while also giving their customers a poor customer experience. Thus in 2014, Friendly Windows was formed with the customer being our #1 priority. Our main struggle was marketing. However, now we have really learned a lot over the past few years. We now know where to put our advertising budget and when to add more. Friendly Windows specializes in window replacement. Read more>>
Lindy Stockton

I spent 20+ years in corporate America helping leaders and organizations move through transformational change and loved it. However, life is truly short and there are many things I love. I am a multipotentialite and wanted to find a way to connect my passion of helping people on a more personal level with my desire to explore and expand my creative endeavors. To that end, I opened The Collage Cafe two years ago, in 2015. I am able to pursue my love of color and creating all the while holding space for others to explore and expand their creative endeavors. Read more>>
Angela Gallios

I began sewing as a child, thanks to my grandmother or (Mom mom) as she was called. I’ve always been creating something or other and recently have had the time to launch my own business. Probably the most challenging thing is just getting started and getting your brand and company name out there. I actually started with another artist friend of mine with an up cycled tote bag project. Several directions later, I have my beloved atelier that is my work space, and I’m now doing bridal veils and headpieces, hats and fascinators, as well as all occasion hair ornaments. Read more>>
Alejandro Urzagaste

I grew up in Michigan, born in Iowa to South American parents. My father, Bolivian and mother, Chilean, met in Elmhurst. My father played guitar and sang South American pop songs to my mother. I listened to music at an early age and wanted to play the drums. We moved to Chicagoland in’85 and St. Charles soon after where I began studying the guitar and playing in bands. I played in the Jazz Workshop at St, Charles HS, the Elgin Community College Youth band and many local acts with my friends. Read more>>
Glen Odiaga

I love computers and have since 1995. Over the decades, I’ve watched them develop from giant clunky boxes with green screens to tiny works of art that project photo-realistic games on monitors the size of walls. I eagerly read each new issue of Byte and PC Magazine, waiting for the next breakthrough in hardware and software; it’s probably fair to classify me as a computer enthusiast. As a hobby, it’s relatively inexpensive. Think about it — the most expensive desktop CPU in existence at any given time is usually a little more than $1,000. Read more>>
Mary Wave and Carole Gabel

We are two Chicago-born-and-bred sisters. We grew up on the Northwest side of Chicago in a loving home. Our house was a classic Georgian that our mother painstakingly decorated. We remember vividly when Irv, the decorator, would come with his ring of samples to get the place in tip-top shape. We lived through shag, flocked wallpaper, and colorful baths. Our mom was very influential in shaping our style. Not only did she decorate, but she was a master shopper. Read more>>
Garrett Metzger

I started in this industry in 1995 and I have done pretty much every job you can think of. Over the years I worked with and learned from some of the most talented people in this industry. As my experience grew, so did my desire to run my own company. Starting in the middle of a recession is not easy, but I was presented with the opportunity to build something unique and couldn’t pass it by. So with the help and support of some great friends and family, Blade Runners Services LLC was formed in the fall of 2009. Read more>>
Josip and Lucy Antolovic

It all started in 1996 when we, along with my mom, immigrated from Croatia. My parents had a tough time finding stabile work. Thankfully my dad was a genius when it came to building, as he finished school as an architect/tradesman back in Europe. Once he found there was a real market for this in Chicago, he then opened up his own remodeling company. After many years of working for himself, he slowly began adding employees. During this time, I went to school and worked for my dad. Once I finished high school I began working full time. Ever since then we have increased our staff and sales. I currently do the designs and 3D renderings as well as office tasks. Read more>>
Tracey Buchman, Julie Engelman, and Glenda Wulfsohn

Our passion for flowers and arranging started a long time ago. Tracey started by asking her mother, a competitive floral arranger, if she could use a 5th grader’s input and Tracey had lots of ideas. Julie’s mother was a botanist who had a 1 acre cut flower garden, and her childhood was spent gathering flowers and putting them in a Dixie cup, of course artfully arranged. Glenda’s mother was also an avid gardener and flower arranger, but Glenda began her interest when she took a flower arranging elective in college. Time moved forward and we all wound up living in the same village serving on various PTO committees together. Read more>>
Nichole Lovett

Harmony Haus began back in 2008 in Evanston, Illinois. I combined my lifelong experience as an artist with the knowledge of home improvement skills and tendencies towards being handy, both traits I picked up from my Mother, and decided to give it a go and strike out in a completely different field than the career path I had been on for the past decade. Moving to Evanston the previous year had really helped my appreciation and awareness of the environment to flourish; living sustainably, being conscientious, and being aware of your carbon footprint. Read more>>
Bela Khizer

I always wanted to provide and help the community with affordable career training programs. In 2016, I came across three people I know who were looking to open a higher education institution. We discussed how we can help the community. After a detailed discussion and an online research the board of directors and I decided to open a non-profit institution that provides with convenient online career based programs. We started the company in June 2016. We started working on the programs and creating the programs in July 2016. Read more>>
Kathy Clausen

The school was started in 1946 by Mr. W. Edward Adams. He eventually married Evangeline Adams who became involved with the business as well. They ran the business together until the untimely death of Mr. Adams in 1984. In the summer of 1985, their daughter Kathy Clausen who at the time was a RN running a Home Health Care agency joined the company. The school was the first school licensed to teach teen’s driver education. All three of the Adams family were involved with rule and law changes regarding driver ed and traffic safety in Illinois. Read more>>
Carrie J. Sullivan

Originally born from a small nucleus of improv alums, The Factory Theater took root in Rogers Park twenty-five years ago in a humble storefront space on Loyola. The goal of The Factory back then is the same as it is today: generate all-original material, solely from the members of the ensemble. Like most storefronts with limited resources and funding, this first home was barely this side of being a theater space in the first place – the kind of charm that only Chicago’s storefront theaters can boast. Read more>>
Amy Landolt

Several years ago, I was having problems sleeping. I would toss and turn all night. When I’d finally fall asleep, I’d wake back up. Or my sleep was restless, and I felt like I hadn’t slept at all. Everyday challenges were overwhelming; I was on edge. I thought the only solution was to take sleeping pills, but the pills made me feel like I was in a fog. A friend insisted I try acupuncture. I thought there was no way that someone sticking needles in me would help. After two sessions, I could sleep through the night without any medication. Read more>>
Jacqueline Stone

TUTA was established in 1995 in Washington, DC by co-founders Zeljko and Natasha Djukic, who brought a unique sense of artistic expression from their European homeland. In 2002, they relocated the company to Chicago. In 2013, longtime company member Jacqueline Stone was named the Artistic Director of the organization. In the ensuing decades, TUTA has presented numerous U.S. premieres of foreign plays from France, Russia, Austria, and Serbia. Read more>>
Aleks Romanenko

Terra Sounds School of Music & Arts, co-founded by Aleks Romanenko, Andrey Ash, and Matvey Kostukovsky, specializes in music, arts, languages, and audio & video production. Since its grand opening in 2011, Terra Sounds has become an integral part of Chicago’s North Shore cultural landscape, with work ranging from daily private lessons and group classes in music, arts, and languages to an annual music festival, concerts, recording projects, art exhibitions and community events. Read more>>
Candice Lee Conner

It all started at the Homecoming dance. Actually that’s where our relationship started, but owning a business together is a challenging but rewarding facet of our relationship. We’ve both been into photography for a long time. Candice’s father is a professional photographer in his own right, and Logan developed a passion for photography while traveling before college. During college Candice studied Advertising and Logan studied Theatre. Doing headshots was a natural combination of our interests, but it really didn’t occur to us until Logan had a particularly bad experience getting headshots in Virginia. Read more>>
Jen Kamins

Brave Initiatives was founded in summer of 2015 by Emily Harburg, Anna Bethune and myself (Jen Kamins). Though we come from different backgrounds, we are each passionate about changing the trajectory of the tech field by increasing the amount of women in the industry while simultaneously training them to be socially-minded. I was working as a recruiter in the tech industry, most recently Motorola, when I realized the gender gap in the engineering pipeline, specifically software engineering. Read more>>
Shefali and Indira Shah

Mother daughter practice started over 35 years ago. Started as a solo practice with Dr Indira Shah. Many years of hard work as a physician as well as running a business. Dr Shefali Shah joined the practice in 2009. Full scope family practice with all ages and treat all conditions. Moved to a new space about 1.5 years ago which has been very positive for the practice. With the ever changing healthcare system and poor reimbursement from insurance companies the last few years have been the toughest to continue to be a private practice. Read more>>
Tanya Pankova

Our business has grown over the years due to our superior attention to detail and commitment to customer satisfaction. As a name synonymous with luxury and quality, ROLADA LIMO INC. works hard to ensure that every individual who contracts us receives the best possible experience. We aim to give you the best stress free, reliable service so you can drive in style and enjoy every minute of your special time. A word about our fleet: We have standard model limousines. Read more>>
Gideon Lipnickas

From the very beginning, I was interested in learning about construction simply thinking that later on it will help me decorate my own home. Soon enough, I was so into construction management, residential construction and remodeling that I spent most of my free time reading about them. I started working in a painting company and have to say that being good at construction definitely helped me to like the subject even more. In 1997, New Concept 180 company was established. Read more>>
