Hometown boys make good
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Danette Goulet
They paddled through the Harbour and surfed Bolsa Chica State Beach at
Warner Avenue as kids -- before bathrooms were there. Now the Weeger
brothers are rebuilding the bathrooms and revamping the state park
facilities.
They went to school at Harbour View Elementary School and Marina High
School. Now they build schools in Huntington Beach.
The used to play children’s games, possibly pretending to be firemen,
in their Huntington Beach neighborhood. Now they build fire stations in
Huntington that hold the big red trucks they had replicas of.
They used to help out with their fathers business. Now they run their
own -- Weeger Bros., Inc.
And since 1995 when they landed the bid to build the Mike Case
addition onto Dwyer Middle School, they have begun to know success and
enjoy a first-rate reputation in their hometown.
“They’re very detailed, they do good work, they seem to be timely in
their execution of their projects,” raved Doug Stack, a city engineer who
co-workers warn can be tough on contractors.
Their latest and greatest project is very close to home for Greg and
Mark Weeger.
Greg Weeger, 46, can see much of his old stomping grounds through the
window trailer where he works each day on the site of his latest project
-- the restoration of Bolsa Chica State Beach.
“We used to water ski in there,” he said, nodding toward the now
off-limits reserve across the street.
“See those trees? That’s where Smokey’s house was -- he took care of
all the oil wells,” he went on. “We used to run around in there,
exploring the old bunkers.”
With a mischievous grin, he talked about taking a little boat they had
out through the Harbour and riding BMX bikes across dirt paths.
In his dusty jeans and work boots and a grimy white polo shirt that
accented a hard-earned tan, it is clear that the older brother still
likes to get his hands dirty and revels in the work.
At $12.3 million, Bolsa Chica is the brothers’ biggest project thus
far, but is a standout project to them for others reasons too.
“It’s so close - I could ride my bike here,” said Greg Weeger, who has
a mere 2.5 miles to go to work everyday.
He said on this project he has taken care to upgrade the little things
-- hinges are stainless steel regardless of lesser requirements, for
instance.
“I don’t want to be embarrassed when I ride my bike by, seeing a
rusting hinge or something,” he explained.
The two have hometown pride.
“We worked hard to get this job,” Greg Weeger said.
But the younger Mark Weeger, 44, who looks equally comfortable in
khaki shorts, flip flops and silk Hawaiian shirt, and runs the office
side of things in their Main Street headquarters, said they’ve had
Huntington jobs just fall in line.
After being the low bidder for Seacliff Elementary School and then
again for new Fire Station No. 6 on Edwards Street, Mark Weeger said they
seem to be getting every job they bid for in Surf City.
“Within Huntington we’ve worked for the city, the state and Huntington
Beach City School District,” Mark Weeger said.
In addition to the Bolsa Chica project, the Weegers are also building
the city’s new beach maintenance facility building in Newland Street.
“It’s neat to be part of the good changes [in Huntington Beach],” Mark
Weeger said.
They are the third generation of Weegers to have a building company
and helped out at their father business at a young age.
“We just kind of fell into it,” said Mark Weeger, who helped on sites
and in the office, learning to put bids together under his father’s
tutelage.
In fact they had a hand in building the house they grew up in when
they moved to Huntington Harbour when they were about 10 and 11.
They have run the Weeger Bros., Inc. together for 20 years. Both
brothers still live Huntington.
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