Stonebrick Group
Stonebrick Group is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Stonebrick Group.
Stonebrick Group is a company.
Key people at Stonebrick Group.
Key people at Stonebrick Group.
Stonebrick Group is a consumer services company based in San Francisco, California, with reported annual revenue of $9.8 million and no listed employees.[1][6] Limited public information suggests it operates in general consumer services, potentially involving contracts or disputes, as evidenced by a 2020 legal case in Arizona District Court where Stonebrick Group LLC sued HSL Cottonwood RC Hotel LLC over a contract matter.[7] It does not appear to be an investment firm or tech startup, and no mission, investment philosophy, key sectors, or startup ecosystem impact is detailed in available sources.[1][6][7]
Other entities with similar names, such as Stone & Brick Masonry Group (a Chicago-area masonry contractor specializing in bricklaying, tuckpointing, chimney repairs, and related services) and Stonebrick Industries Private Limited (a private company incorporated in India in 2022), are distinct and unrelated based on location and business focus.[2][3][4]
Public records provide scant details on Stonebrick Group's founding or key figures, with no founding year, partners, or evolution noted.[1][6] The company's profile emerges primarily through business directories listing it in San Francisco's consumer services sector.[1][6] A notable early event is its involvement in a contract dispute filed on April 3, 2020, in the U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona, indicating operational activity by that time.[7]
This contrasts with better-documented similar-named firms, like Stone & Brick Masonry Group, which started locally on January 1, 2010, incorporated on September 15, 2010, and has been BBB-accredited since 2017 under President Maksat Dzhumaliev.[2][4]
No developer experience, speed/pricing advantages, or investment track record applies, as it does not match investment firm or tech company profiles.[1][6][7]
Stonebrick Group shows no evident role in the tech landscape, with no mentions of startups, investments, software products, or innovation trends.[1][6][7] It operates in consumer services, potentially offline or traditional sectors, without influence on ecosystems like AI, fintech, or venture capital. Market forces favoring tech (e.g., digital transformation) do not appear relevant, and timing factors like post-2020 recovery are unlinked beyond the lawsuit.[7]
Similar-named masonry firms contribute to construction/repair markets but remain outside tech influence.[2][4]
Stonebrick Group's opaque profile limits forward analysis; it may persist as a low-profile consumer services entity, potentially resolving past disputes like the 2020 Arizona case.[7] Absent tech ties, trends like digital services or AI-driven consumer tools are unlikely shapers. Influence may remain niche unless new disclosures emerge, tying back to its unassuming San Francisco consumer services presence.[1][6]