Since 1952, Steel Art Company has been manufacturing premium-quality architectural signage, metal letters, and logotypes for the sign trade.
With expert project advice from a team of design professionals and skilled craftsmen with generations of experience, we are fully committed to serving your requirements. Each department of Steel Art – customer service, accounting, sales, and manufacturing – is professionally adept to assist you, and all are prepared to add value by any means possible.
Our new website showcases our broad array of products, along with the unsurpassed custom finishes that we offer exclusively for the sign trade.
Our Promise
As the premier supplier to the architectural sign industry, Steel Art Company offers a diverse array of cutting-edge finished products exclusively to sign professionals. Our desire to provide customers with unsurpassed quality instills in us the commitment to continuously improve our manufacturing methods. For over six decades, Steel Art Company has been perfecting sign products, exceeding customer expectations, and leading innovation. We are comprised of craftsmen, designers, project managers, product developers, and industry leaders — all dedicated to serving you. From the simplest solid plate letter to the most complex mixed-media illuminated project, count on Steel Art Company to deliver the very best. Contact us to experience how Steel Art can make your sign company more profitable. We look forward to meeting our promise of exceeding your expectations.
Statement of Non-Compete:
Steel Art Company sells all products strictly to the trade for re-sale. Steel Art Company will never compete with our customers for business from end users. Steel Art Company expects and honors complete transparency both from our competitors as well as our customers. We hold our customers to the same high standard we hold ourselves. We sell strictly to the trade, no exceptions.
We actively vet new customers and often turn aside work from end users posing as sign professionals. Steel Art Company is well known for referring work to our customers whenever contacted by non-sign professionals. As a sign professional working with Steel Art Company, you will NEVER see: 1. Any phony websites selling direct to prospective customers; 2. Any Steel Art-owned companies selling direct; 3. Any sales agents misinterpreting their sources and selling direct; or 4. Any trade show presence, mailings, or other advertisements intended to appeal to anyone other than sign professionals.
Corporate History
Norbert Borell and his beloved wife Blanca were married in Krakow, Poland, just prior to the outbreak of World War II. When the Nazis invaded Poland, Norbert, Blanca, and their families were rounded up and interned in Hitler’s death camps. Incredibly, after surviving years of inhuman atrocities in multiple camps, Norbert and Blanca were reunited soon after the liberation of the camps by the Allies in 1945. Having lost nearly all of their family members in the Holocaust, the two made the decision to emigrate to America in 1948 in order to start a new life. The couple eventually settled in Peabody, Massachusetts.
Upon their arrival, Norbert took a job working in the tanneries of Peabody. It was grueling, dirty work with long hours and limited pay. After a time, he was contacted by a fellow survivor of the camps who had emigrated to Canada. This man happened to be skilled in the manufacture of metal letters. He urged Norbert to come to Canada to work with him, which Norbert agreed to do. After learning his craft over a few years, Norbert returned to the United States, and, in 1952, opened a tiny shop in the spare room of a barber’s shop at 1436 Commonwealth Avenue in Brighton, Massachusetts. He named his new business Steel Art Company.
Slowly, Norbert built up his sole proprietorship. His background as an engineering graduate in Poland proved extremely useful, particularly when faced with challenging installations. As a result of his incredible work ethic and dedication, his reputation for quality and dependability began to grow and so did the workload. Soon, the barber decided to relocate and Norbert was able to add the storefront office to his growing shop. During these early years of the business, Blanca tended to their young children John and Barbara, and also chipped in by handling the accounting duties for the office. Most of Steel Art’s workers at this time were men who were moonlighting from their full-time jobs and working in their off hours.
Finally, in 1962, Norbert was able to secure a major contract to provide signage and lettering for the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority and the Massachusetts State Police Barracks. He was now able to take on four or five permanent employees at Steel Art Company. It was also around this time that his son, John, began coming into the shop to assist in any way he could.
By the mid 1960’s, Steel Art Company was on a roll. Suddenly, the small backroom company in Brighton was being specified by architects and general contractors to handle extensive signage work for new construction projects all over Boston and the surrounding area. Hospital buildings, university buildings, bank buildings, and municipal buildings began springing up like weeds, and they all needed a dependable subcontractor for their signage.
As Norbert’s son John grew older, he began taking on more tasks for the Company and learning the operation. Although he went off to college in Maine in 1968, John often returned to help his father at Steel Art whenever possible. By this time, Norbert’s health was failing and he asked John about his interest in taking over the business. During his first few years of college, John wasn’t sure he wanted the company to become his career. However by his senior year, he realized this would be his only shot to keep the family business in operation. So after John graduated one Sunday in spring, he was on the job the next day.
While John had been away at college, his sister Barbara met Stewart Dobson, a student at Boston College. Soon John and Stew became friends and in September of 1973, John asked Stew to leave his other job and join him at Steel Art Company. Not knowing anything about the sign industry, Stew was apprehensive. However, he soon found his calling in the area of sales recruitment after spending weeks driving around the Boston area hunting down sign projects with Norbert. When Norbert suddenly passed away in March of 1974, Stew became the man in charge of the sales department for Steel Art Company. He was a one man show. It was also at this time that he discovered his hidden art talent. Soon he was drawing most of the cutting programs by hand and penning the shop drawings for the pulling of permits. With all of his new contacts in the area, Stew was urged to join the Massachusetts Sign Contractors Association, later serving 12 years as its president.
It was after joining this organization that Stew realized most of the local sign companies had no one to manufacture custom metal letters for them. It was then that he started making inquiries and Steel Art began taking on work for a number of local shops. With all of this extra work, it became apparent that Steel Art had outgrown the former barbershop space in Brighton. So in 1984, John and Stew took a leap of faith and purchased an 18,000 square foot space at 75 Brainerd Road in neighboring Allston. Not sure they needed the entire space, they initially rented half of the building to a local cable television company, but within a year they realized they needed every inch of space for Steel Art Company’s new operation to commence.
In 1987, Steel Art Company made perhaps its largest step forward by purchasing its first abrasive water jet machine. In one fell swoop, the 13 operating band-saws became a thing of the past. Not only did the water jet handle all of the regular cutting jobs,it allowed Stew and John to experiment with cutting materials such as granite, glass, and even marble. Soon they were showing off their amazing samples to architects, designers and local sign companies in order to create a demand—and that they certainly did.
In recognition of their potential capacity with the water jet technology, John and Stew made the decision in 1989 to transform Steel Art Company from a sign company and installer, to a manufacturer for the sign industry. It was then that the Steel Art Company, Inc., as we know it today, was born. This entire change of approach meant that Steel Art would need to expand its reach nationally. This, they realized, would require the services of an eminently qualified sales director to market Steel Art’s name and products throughout the country. The man they were looking for arrived that year: Charlie Blanchard.
When Charlie arrived in March of 1989, he began by putting together a national business model to make Steel Art competitive around the country. After that, Charlie was on the road almost constantly, meeting people from all of the different sign associations around the country. He eventually joined the International Sign Association (ISA), where he ended up serving on the board of directors for six years.
As the name Steel Art became more well known around the country, the company became a preferred vendor for associations such as the World Sign Association (WSA) and the Texas Sign Association (TSA), and franchises such as ASI Sign Systems. Through our partnerships with these associations and our growing customer base, Steel Art began growing exponentially.
Throughout the past 25 years, Steel Art has survived market collapses, recessions, increased competition, and major changes in the sign industry as a whole. We’ve added new water jets, lasers, and all of the modern devices used today in the manufacture of signs. We’ve hired new people of diverse backgrounds, each of whom have added something important to Steel Art. Through it all we have tried to remain true to our principles of providing the highest quality product and the best service in the industry. As a family-owned company, we have also succeeded in retaining a high level of accessibility and personal rapport with our valued customers.
As a result of these years of progress, and thanks to our wonderful customers, we find ourselves today in a beautiful, new, state-of-the-art facility conceived by John Borell over his 40+ years as president of Steel Art Company. For the family of Blanca and Norbert Borell, the building of this structure remains extremely personal. It stands today as the realization of a dream started by a husband and wife, who after surviving the unthinkable, journeyed to this wonderful country more than six decades ago after losing everything — except of course one another.
Company Name | Steel Art Company |
Business Category | Stainless Steel |
Address | 189 Dean Street Norwood Massachusetts United States ZIP: 02062 |
President | NA |
Year Established | 1952 |
Employees | NA |
Memberships | World Sign Associate, International Sign Association, Arizona Sign Association, Southern States Sign Association, Texas Sign Association, Illinois Sign Association, United States Sign Council, Northwest Sign Council, Northeast Sign Association, Mid South Sign Association, Tri States Sign Association |
Hours of Operation | NA |
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