From São Paulo to Moncton: Building a 11-Person Design Firm During Atlantic Canada's Labour Shortage | Ep 58
Brazilian-immigrant CEO Arides Cabreira traces a 37-year path from a 12-year-old draughtsman in a São Paulo metallurgical plant to running a 11-person internationally distributed design firm in Moncton — offering a rare outside-in perspective on Atlantic Canada construction.
Host Daniel Arsenault sits down with Arides Cabreira, CEO of 46North Group of Companies, who traveled from Moncton to record in Halifax. The episode is a deep founder-journey interview covering Cabreira's origins in southern Brazil (hired illegally at 12 as a designer), his progression through large-scale architecture in Brazil (including working on the Volart rotating building in Curitiba), immigration to Boston then Canada, work as a carpentry lead and quality-control inspector on Alberta oil-sands modular camps for Horizon North, and ultimately the 2020-21 launch of 46North in Moncton. The guest gives a detailed inside view of structuring an umbrella company (design + project management + holdings), hiring a globally-distributed team of architects (Philippines, Brazil, Vietnam, Ukraine) during a labor shortage, and the firm's current work designing modular manufactured homes for US clients. Secondary threads include: NB building-code Part 3 vs Part 9 licensing limits, the 2023 Moncton housing-market surge, the calculation logic behind taking calculated entrepreneurial risk with a Plan B in hand, and a frank assessment of why administration is the hardest part of growing a small design firm. The episode fits the show's 'give the industry a voice' promise well for New Brunswick operators but skews more immigration/global than Halifax-centric.