Emily Bittenbender: Building Opportunities for Women

Emily Bittenbender

As appeared in IinBUSINESS | WINTER 2020 Magazine
by Graziella DiNuzzo

The Virginia Slims cigarette slogan, “You’ve come a long way baby,” appeared across magazines and billboards in the 1970’s, at the same time when members of the National
Organization for Women (NOW) was standing up for the Equal Rights Amendment in the US senate.

While the 70’s feminist revolution was mounting, and women were increasingly entering the workforce as secretaries, teachers, bookkeepers, waitresses and nurses, many women like Emily Bittenbender’s mom and grandmother were maintaining their traditional “work” roles inside the home. Men’s traditional work roles included truck drivers, production workers, carpenters and farmers. “I was raised in a matriarchal house where domestic life ruled,” recalls
Bittenbender. “I remember mom giving me a step stool so I could help
in the kitchen.”

Bittenbender likes to drive trucks and her all-terrain vehicle. As a child, she wanted to play outside on her family’s 400-acre farm outside of Huntington Mills, Pennsylvania. “Boys were always treated better than girls.”

“I am grateful to my grandfather who owned an architect firm and used to take me with him to job sites. I loved it.”

Fashion was Bittenbender’s first career goal. She attended the Moore College of Art as a fashion design major and was told, “I didn’t have the talent or skill to be in fashion, so I moved on and enrolled in the commercial interior design department.”

Bittenbender’s decision to pursue commercial design paid off when she was hired to lead a team in the design and construction of the National Constitution Center in January 2000.
Three years later in 2003, Bittenbender liquidated all of her assets and started Bittenbender Construction, LLP, the first 100% female-owned and operated general contracting construction firm in the region, and today, the largest. She partnered with Angela McCaffery, business partner and Chief Operating Officer. Bittenbender Construction is certified by (WBENC) the Women’s Business Enterprise National Council and the (PAUCP) Pennsylvania
Unified Certification Program. Angela McCaffery, joined Emily as Chief Operating Officer.
“I did it on my own, no husband or dad.”

Bittenbender Construction provides construction management and general contracting services for corporate, greenspace, institutional, medical, museums and attractions, retail and science and technology. “I needed to start my own company because I didn’t feel comfortable working in other people’s cultures. I wanted a more team-managed focus …an entrepreneurial approach to client’s projects with no egos or a lot of rules. “

The company’s open-air offices with beautiful views of the Delaware River reflect Bittenbender’s flexible management style and respect for her team as equals. It wasn’t surprising that I couldn’t find her bio on her website.

Considered one of the most diverse companies in our region, Bittenbender has made diversity, inclusion and equality her mission – with a workforce consisting of sixty-percent women professionals and 16% minorities.

And Bittenbender loves millennials.

“Millennials are open-minded and uninhibited. They don’t see color or gender and base people on their actions. They are awesome.”

Some noteworthy Bittenbender projects include Franklin Park, Sister Cities Park and the newly renovated Love Park “I love working on projects that have purpose and meaning and
immediate community impact. I was sitting at a restaurant and a woman approached me to say thank you for building Sister Cities Park because now she has somewhere in center city to take her daughter to play.”

In 2005 architect Jewel Johnson found herself on the same project as Emily Bittenbender, they soon developed a friendship.

“If you would have told me that in 2011 I would find myself occupying a space at Bittenbender Construction so I could literally learn firsthand how to incorporate construction management into my architect business, I would have said you were crazy,” explains Johnson. “Emily opened her heart, gave me a desk in her office and introduced me to her banker, accountant, attorney, sub-contractors and ultimately her clients.”

“It’s important for me to be a mentor for women and minorities,“ says
Bittenbender. “It’s hard to succeed as a start-up and even more difficult
for an African-American woman.”

Johnson explains how at a Construction Industry event award ceremony event where Bittenbender was being honored, out of 200 guests, there were only 5 minorities – and all 5 were Emily’s guests.

“I can never repay Emily for all the help she has given me,” says Johnson who runs Antoine Johnson, LLC. “Women need to help women,” Bittenbender says twice.

“We have a lot of cool women in this city- ” and that most certainly includes Emily Bittenbender. •

P’alante! The Father and Son Construction Duo Who Never Stop Moving Forward

Dan Labrador had just picked up his son Niko from school when he spotted it – “a white, very used, newly painted van…a beauty,” he knew immediately it was the one. As soon as he arrived home, Dan spoke with his wife Maggie and discussed his plans to start his own contracting business. With Maggie’s support, Dan gave his two-week notice to the painting company where he was working full time, “we put everything we had at that time – all the credit cards totaling about $4,500 and our company was off.”

Dan founded Lyon Contracting Services, LLC in 2011 on the principles inherited from his fearless father who left Cuba in 1967 for a better life in America, “with nothing but a bag in hand,” says Dan. “The fact that you came from a place where you were not free makes everything much more bearable.” In 1970 Dan’s mother, brother, and sisters joined his father, “I was the youngest and born here, and consider myself the celebration baby,” Dan laughs.

Dan recalls the moment as a young boy when he listened intently to his father’s conversation about starting a business, “I saw that look in his eyes and I knew as a young boy that one day I would have my own business too.”

Lyon Contracting Services is a full service general contracting company, headquartered in Philadelphia, with commercial and residential clients within 60 miles of Northeast Philadelphia. Lyon offers construction specialties and sub-packages from rough and finished carpentry to drywall, acoustical ceiling and millwork installation and full-service painting.

Running a family business wasn’t always easy. To get through the day, Dan’s family says this Cuban word …P’alante!

Dan explains, “When things aren’t going well…you exhale. P’alante! When things are going great…you celebrate, P’alante! When things are going wrong…you make it right, P’alante!”

Dan credits his wife, a first-generation American from Puerto Rico, for helping him navigate the challenges of running a family business. While their business was growing, so was their family with the addition of Dan’s two daughters who were born a year apart. “When my son was in his first year of college he told me he wanted to work with me. That was the game-changer and how our business got stronger.”

“Growing up my father and I were best of buds, I was his mini-me everywhere he went,” says Niko. As I grew older I wanted to be just like him and be with him as much as I could.” After completing two years of community college, Niko decided to join his father fulltime. “That was in the summer of 2012. I started out just following Dan everywhere. Through the eight years, I slowly developed and gained more responsibility and moved up to project manager,” Niko explains.

“The car rides are literally the best times with my father, some of the most hilarious moments and most important life lessons I’ve learned have been during a workday car ride together.”

As a minority-owned and operated business and a first-generation Cuban American, Dan understands the challenges that immigrant communities face in the workforce. “You’re limited when you are from another country; you have the language barrier and don’t have a huge network.” Dan has made it his mission to pay it forward by sourcing workers with highly specialized skills, developed in their native countries.

“It feels great that we might have a little part in creating a bit of that American Dream for their families.”

Every fall, the Greater Northeast Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce (GNPCC) participates in Minority Enterprise Development Week, a citywide initiative giving special recognition to a minority-owned business. GNPCC nominated Lyon Contracting and Mayor Kenney honored the Labrador family in a special ceremony on Monday, October 7th.

According to the US Senate Committee on Small business and Entrepreneurship, over the last 10 years, minority business enterprises accounted for more than 50 percent of the two million new businesses started in the United States and created 4.7 million jobs. There are now more than four million minority-owned companies in the United States.

“I’m very thankful and humbled,” Dan says. My wife, my daughters, my son are the reason and why we hope to build a business where we can serve our clients and our entire team for generations to come.

By the time Dan was 20 years old he was married, working full-time had a young son and was taking college courses at Temple University. In 2017-18, Dan was among the 14th cohort of 20 graduates who recently completed the Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Business-Greater Philadelphia program.

Niko understands his father’s drive – “it’s in his blood.” In his new role as Vice President, Niko plans to continue to reach a greater audience through new marketing communication platform including social media and website development. But Niko admits, “There is still so much more. I plan to work beside my father for many years to come, learning from him one car ride at a time.“

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