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Advertising deadline: April 9, 1999 STY 3/19 1999 68 Detroit Jewish News magazine eter Burton's grandfather, Barnett Burton, began building homes in the Detroit area in 1912 — the year the Titanic met an ice- berg. Unlike the behemoth of the sea, the Burton family in the local building industry has successfully remained afloat through three generations. Peter Burton's father, Lester, is still active. His partnership with Nathaniel Share in Burton Share Builders has survived 50 years without a formal written agreement. Robert Katzman, Peter Burton's partner in the current firm of ice Burton Katzman Development Co., is his first cousin. The family roots also extend to the post-war Prudential Builders operated by Burton's uncle, Sidney Katzman, and Leslie Schmier and Barney Katzman. Burton, who is 48, "after finding myself like a lot of my gen- Peter Burton: BM president. eration did in the `70s," came back to Detroit in 1980 to take over the management of his father's portfolio and manage his assets. "And I put on a second hat, starting my own real estate development company," he said. ,_/ By the mid-1980s, he had partnered with Katzman. Burton concentrates upon industrial and commercial construction, while Katzman does primari- ly residential. Katzman, who is in his early 50s, was a co-founder of Abbey Homes. Like Burton's father and Nathaniel Share, Burton and Katzman also main- tam their partnership without any formal agreement. Recent Burton Katzman Development Company projects include the Executive Hills Technological Park in Auburn Hills. The first tenant of the 130,000-square-foot dedicated service center was DaimlerChrysler. Among their current developments are the Five Point subdivision oppo- site Oakland University, where they will soon break ground for a 55,000- square-foot medical building, and Wellington Green, a 250,000-square-foot office park. Other projects include a 300-acre development featuring a 180,000- square-foot neighborhood shopping center at Silver Bell and Adams roads with Kroger and Arbor Drugs as tenants, and a 100-acre industrial develop- ment off 1-275 in Canton. "We recently acquired Heritage Homes from Heinz Prechter, the down- river industrialist," said Burton. The company has now been renamed Westn-iinister Abbey Burton's one-year term as president of the Building Industry Association of Southeastern Michigan runs through January of 2000. Events sponsored by the association include the 81st annual Builders Home & Detroit Flower Show, March 18-21 at Cobo Center in Detroit, and the third annual Home Improvement Show, April 8-11 at Now Expo Center. The Building Industry Association of Southeastern Michigan has more than 1,950 professional builders, remodelers, developers and associate mem- bers in related industries. It is the fourth largest association of the more than 800 state and local home builders associations that comprise the National Association of Home Builders. NIASIER Nt 3 Nearly a quarter-century later, the company, which now employs 25, is structured the same way. In 1965, Komer married the for- mer Judy Band, whose father Herman was also a builder. Once a teacher, she has spent the last 23 years working in real estate and is now with Cranbrook Associates Realtors. The Komers have two daughters. The Wineman family founded the former People's Outfitting Company. Henry II and John's grandfather, Henry Wineman, was the first chair- man of the Allied Jewish Campaign in 1925-28, and James Wineman was also active in the Jewish Federation. The company's Southfield headquar- ters sits on the last parcel of land the first Henry Wineman assembled in the 1920s on Northwestern Highway. Richard Komer served for 25 years on the board of the Fresh Air Society and was president in 1988-91. Henry Wineman II followed Komer onto the board. Komer is now active on Federation's Real Estate and Property Management Committee. IT