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Aposhian Garage Has Been Livelihood For Four Generations

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  • Aposhian Garage Has Been Livelihood For Four Generations

    APOSHIAN GARAGE HAS BEEN LIVELIHOOD FOR FOUR GENERATIONS
    By Mike Gorrell

    Salt Lake Tribune
    Jan 21 2010
    Utah

    The Aposhian family has been repairing cars for four... (Rick Egan /
    The Salt Lake Tribune)Â"12Â"In 1940, people told Armenian immigrant
    George Aposhian he was out of his mind moving his full-service garage
    from Sugar House to its present location just east of Highland Drive
    on 3300 South.

    That was country back then. The street car that ran along Highland
    Drive had its terminus at 33rd, which was not even paved at the time.

    "Now we're not even in the center of the valley," marveled his
    grandson, Rick, who runs the garage that has provided work for four
    generations of Aposhians.

    The garage's tow truck is driven these days by his 75-year-old father,
    Richard, who has spent the past 62 years with the company "on almost
    a daily basis, except for his military service," Aposhian said.

    Rick's sister,

    Jason, from left, Richard, Rick, Doug, Eileen and Holly Aposhian at
    their shop in Salt Lake City. (Rick Egan / The Salt Lake Tribune)Eileen
    Freeman, and daughter Holly keep watch over the office, while brother
    Doug is the main technician. "He's the brains behind the shop,"
    Aposhian said.

    In his youth, Aposhian's son Jason said he wanted little to do with
    the maintenance and repair business. But eventually he came to realize
    that "this is not a bad business," Aposhian said. "He's been with us
    for eight years now."

    And Aposhian? "I've got the life sentence," he quipped, starting in
    1974 as a teenager.

    Today's vehicle maintenance and repair business hardly resembles the
    industry Aposhian entered.

    "I don't know of another business that technology has changed so
    much over the past 30 years," he said. "It's gone from a greasy,
    broken-knuckle

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    business to one that is extremely computer- and electronics-driven.

    "It's absolutely staggering how emission, ignition and fuel systems
    are completely different than they used to be. It's not even the
    same business."

    Although he sometimes shares nostalgic feelings about the mechanic
    trade of his youth, Aposhian prefers the modern approach to car
    repairs.

    "It may be a little more satisfying to diagnose issues and make
    them right."

    The Aposhian clan puts its collective vehicle knowledge to work outside
    of the garage, as well, having established themselves as fixtures at
    Rocky Mountain Raceway in West Valley City.

    For a decade, the garage has entered a race car in the modified
    division. Jason Aposhian is the sole driver, now that Gary Madsen
    has retired after recording three championships.

    "Jason has come along well and is trying to accomplish the same thing,"
    his dad said.

    It's not always easy to devote a weekend to working on a car after
    spending the workweek doing the same, but Aposhian feels right at
    home among the raceway crowd.

    "It's a natural fit," he said. "There's a lot of garage and
    machine-shop owners out there, so there's camaraderie in that."

    Naturally, winning is sweet. "It's satisfying to build something and
    make it go fast," Aposhian said, adding a fear of failure also serves
    as a strong motivating force.

    "We take a lot of pride in not having a race car break down over
    things we preach to our customers about every day."

    http://www.sltrib.com/business/ci_1422 4444

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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