A manufacturer of officially licensed diploma frames has purchased a manufacturing facility in Monroe for $1.68 million, according to property records. Aurora Ventures, an entity controlled by Lucie Voves of Brookfield, bought the one-story, 15,102-square-foot building at 600 Pepper St. on Dec. 2, records show. Voves is the CEO and founder of Church Hill Classics, […]
A manufacturer of officially licensed diploma frames has purchased a manufacturing facility in Monroe for $1.68 million, according to property records.
Aurora Ventures, an entity controlled by Lucie Voves of Brookfield, bought the one-story, 15,102-square-foot building at 600 Pepper St. on Dec. 2, records show.
Voves is the CEO and founder of Church Hill Classics, a frame maker that occupies commercial space at 594 Pepper St., according to its website. An email seeking comment from Voves was not immediately returned.
The seller is 600 Pepper Street LLC, which is controlled by Provence Land Company LLC and Matthew Oneglia of Torrington. Oneglia is a vice president of Torrington-based O&G Industries and oversees Provence Land Company LLC, O&G Industries’ real estate division.
The vacant building, which was previously occupied by precision parts maker Mikron Corp., sits on 4.9 acres and was built in 1981. It was appraised at $1.23 million and assessed at $860,200 in 2024, property records show.