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Content about Metal

January 25, 2012

CHICAGO — Self-service laundry sales rose in the West, Midwest and Northeast in December, while Southern operators saw sales drop for a second straight month, according to the most recent AmericanCoinOp.com unscientific StatShot survey.

The Northeast saw the biggest month-over-month sales increase (compared to December 2010) of 8.4%. The Midwest and West each posted 4.4% increases. The South was down 6.5%, after having been down 0.7% the previous month.

One Western operator raised prices 10%, with turns per day unchanged. Wash-dry-fold sales were up 26%. “I have only laundries in county of 30,000. I think WDF (is) up because of subcontractors here for restart of copper mines.”

“Construction in the area has brought in out-of-state workers with drop-off laundry” amid an improving economy, a Midwestern operator reports.

Respondents were also asked about their 2011 fourth-quarter sales (compared to 2010 fourth-quarter sales).

Fourth-quarter sales rose 7.4% in the Northeast, 4.5% in the West, and 3.7% in the Midwest. Southern operators experienced a 7.1% decrease in the final quarter of 2011.

“(We) used coupons more this year, and less snow meant less days closed to weather,” says one Midwestern operator who also reported increased theft of laundry carts, presumably for metal scrap value.

“My sales were up, I believe, because first we expanded and added another 15 washers and 20 dryers, and we got a better mechanic to fix our machines so we have way less ‘out of orders’ than before,” reports a Western operator.

A Southern operator reported having a record quarter for wash-dry-fold business, up more than 30% from the previous best quarter.

AmericanCoinOp.com’s StatShot includes information on sales, wages, costs or other financial data based on anonymous survey information provided by industry owners and operators.

Audience members are invited to participate in these unscientific surveys, which are conducted online via a partner website, on a regular basis. Self-service laundry operators are encouraged to participate, as a greater number of responses will help to better define industry trends.

November 7, 2011

MARFA, Texas — A well-known business strategy is to run two businesses under one roof, share the overhead, and mingle the clientele. Perhaps the best example of this in our industry is Tumbleweed Laundry.

Daniel Browning is the “Laundromateur” who pulled off the magical feat of combining an ice cream parlor, coffee shop and Laundromat. The genius is that Browning has a monopoly in all three markets.

Relaxation and Art

Marfa is a small town of 2,200 residents with quite a bit of tourist trade. The reason for tourism is twofold: the place is a relaxing area to visit, with Big Bend National Park nearby, and it is the home of Chinati, the contemporary art museum, which designates Marfa as an art town.

In the 1970s, a successful New York artist named Donald Judd purchased a 550-acre former German prisoner-of-war camp. He began creating his abstract sculptures—large metal boxes as well as concrete shapes—and setting them all over the grounds as well as inside the 30-odd buildings. Then he invited other artists to come and work, and encouraged them to leave many works at the facility.

He got backing from the Chinati Foundation, thus Chinati was born. With daily guided tours at $25 a person, Chianti attracts serious art fans. All this is most unusual for a remote west Texas town that’s a 21/2-hour drive to the nearest city, El Paso, and close to the Mexican border.

Laundry Born in Former Hospital

So, back to Browning. Moving from Austin to Marfa, he and his wife envisioned a Laundromat since there wasn’t one in town. He produced a 130-page business plan, purchased a building, and set about creating a going concern. He dealt with Dexter equipment because he thought the company offered a good financing package. The total equipment cost came in at the $75,000 range, but he only had to put $40,000 into the venture.

The building he found that would work was an old, tiny, seven-room hospital. “Half the people living in Marfa today were born where the dryers are,” Browning says.

By doing all the construction work himself in nine weeks, he converted the hospital into a Laundromat and upstairs apartment.

His idea was to combine retail, commercial and wash, dry and fold (flip and fold). He went after flip-and-fold volume, but found that it was too sporadic and created too many hassles to make it worth dealing with. But he won hotel and restaurant trade, and his commercial operation was off and running.

One day, Browning was doing a side job, fixing a coffee shop’s espresso machine, when the owner said they were closing. Browning’s wife had been in the coffee business in earlier years, and she sometimes talked about opening a shop in Marfa. Something clicked. Why not combine a coffee shop alongside a laundry, and throw in ice cream to boot?

Browning studied his floor plan, and it became clear that he could give up some space for a coffee shop. Approximately a year and a half ago, the coffee shop/ice cream parlor came into being. It helped that the second coffee shop in town had closed, so he has a monopoly.

Perhaps Kaki Aufdengarten, Browning’s regular employee, says it best: “We’re the only Laundromat in town, the only coffee shop, the only ice cream parlor, so in a sense, we’re not a company. We’re a public service.”

Wednesday: Ingenuity is what makes America great...

October 31, 2011

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. — Since Oct. 1, the San Luis Obispo Police Department has investigated 16 laundry-room burglaries, many of which have occurred at apartment complexes in the southern part of the city.

The suspect uses tools to literally rip the metal coin boxes apart, and has also cut water lines and turned several machines upside-down to access the coins. Numerous machines have been destroyed in the burglaries.

Police are seeking a white or Hispanic male, late 30s or early 40s, approximately 5-foot-9, with dark hair. The suspect fled on a single-speed BMX-type bicycle when confronted by a citizen during one of the burglaries.

San Luis Obispo police are urging citizens to report any suspicious activity in and around laundry rooms in the city.

January 23, 2009

June 30, 2008

October 17, 2007