Go to almost any grocery store, and you'll likely find products on the shelves that were made in the Richmond area. Snack foods, dips, sauces and spices — all are made in factories here. The bread may have been baked with equipment manufactured locally.
Even some refrigerator units that help keep food products cool are made at a plant in Chesterfield County. Build a house, and there is a good possibility that some of the building components were made in the region. Buy some paper plates, and they may have come from a plant in South Richmond. Some chemicals that go into pharmaceuticals are produced here. Read more
If a region can be defined by the products it makes, then folks could have a lively debate over how to define the Richmond area.
You won't see the name Alfa Laval on any products in the grocery store. But whenever you buy milk or other beverages, there's a good chance the company had an important role in making them.
Premier Pet Products believes that pets and their humans should get along.
The C.F. Sauer Co. is as Richmond as they come, and some of its products — namely, Duke's mayonnaise — are Southern classics.
Tucked into an industrial park near Iron Bridge Road in Chesterfield County, Velocity Micro Inc. quietly competes against the Hewlett-Packards and Dells of the world.
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Note: This poll is not scientific and reflects the opinions of only those Internet users who have chosen to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent public opinion.
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