Just Getting Started: Petri Plumbing Marks 120 Years in Brooklyn

“We’ve been through the Spanish Influenza,” said Michael Petri. “We’ve been through World War I. We’ve been through the Depression. We’ve been through World War II. As things change, you’ve got to change with the times.” (Graphic: Brooklyn Downtown Star)
By Jack Delaney | jdelaney@queensledger.com
BAY RIDGE — Michael and Gerard Petri peered into the stripped-down skeleton of a house under renovation in Bay Ridge, checking out its plumbing. “Yeesh,” they thought, laughing at the rough handiwork.
Then they realized they had done the job themselves — 55 years ago.
You can’t blame the Petri brothers for losing track. Since taking over Petri Plumbing in 1987, they’ve repaired thousands of homes across Brooklyn. And the family business has even deeper roots: This spring, it’s celebrating an incredible 120 years of service to the borough.
Brancale and D’Amico Plumbing, Hardware, and Tinsmithing opened in 1906, two years after the subway system began operating. Initially, the duo — the Petris’ great-grandfather and great-great-uncle, respectively — sold their skills to Bensonhursters out of a donkey-drawn cart; a horseshoe from those early days still hangs in the company office.
As always, the younger generation brought new ideas. John Petri apprenticed to the shop in his teens, gradually perfecting his trade until he became the general manager of what was by then one of the “go-to” options for residential plumbing and heating in Southern Brooklyn. A key innovation was to ditch the donkey for a truck, extending the business’ reach as it settled into dual headquarters in Bay Ridge and Gowanus.
Next came Peter Petri, his son, who returned from World War II and graduated as the top of his class at the New York City Police Academy in 1947. During his off hours, when he wasn’t fighting the rising corruption of the time or establishing himself as a giant of Brooklyn’s sandlot football scene, Peter plumbed; he retired from the NYPD at age 43, and stewarded the shop long enough to hand off the baton to another pair of Petris.
Michael and Gerard started helping out as kids, and didn’t always love the work. “I used to hide in the park just so they wouldn’t find me,” remembers Michael, chuckling, “because they would make us do the worst jobs.”
After attending college on a football scholarship, Michael contemplated teaching. Then he received a slew of offers in sales, and accepted a position in Cleveland with his father’s blessing. The money was good — but when the other passengers began boarding the plane, Michael couldn’t bring himself to follow.
Instead, he teamed up with Gerard, stamping their last name on the family business. Eventually, the brothers realized they had slightly different interests: Gerard specialized in underground plumbing for megaprojects — his company has done work for the Freedom Tower and Yankee Stadium — while Michael doubled down on residential clients.
“It happened for a reason,” said Michael, of the flight he never took. “I’m happy with the way it ended up, and it’s been interesting to watch everything evolve.”
Michael’s son Christopher has experienced a remarkably similar arc. He won the national rugby championship while at Xavier High School, and his brother Mike competed for the US at the 2007 and 2011 World Cups — prompting the Wall Street Journal to profile the Petris as Brooklyn’s “first family of rugby.”
Christopher was carving out a post-grad path in finance, when he started to have second thoughts. His reservations paid off: he has since led Petri Plumbing into a new era as a multi-million-dollar company that boasts 40 staff members and 22 trucks.
“Chris has done a great job, he stepped up,” said Michael. “He’s won the respect of the people that work for us and the trust of our clients.”
Still, why has this particular plumbing business stayed afloat, when so many of its contemporaries went under? “Look, we weren’t perfect,” said Michael. “But we were always responsive, always cordial. We had a great reputation.”
Another strength has been the Petris’ openness to rethinking their business model. “We’ve been through the Spanish Influenza. We’ve been through World War I. We’ve been through the Depression. We’ve been through World War II. As things change, you’ve got to change with the times.”
Some things are constant, however. As company lore has it, during one of the worst snowstorms of the 1980 two separate clients’ boilers broke down. It was the night before Christmas Eve, but Michael and Gerard strapped chains to the tires of their trucks and hauled both boilers out of hatches to replace them — a feat said to have required “six men, or two Petris.”
On the day of our call, the city lay similarly buried under more than 20 inches of snow. Yet Chris and his employees were digging out their trucks on Butler Street, ready — as always — to heed Brooklynites’ calls.



