Beginnings (1939–1950) After the end of the dictatorship of General
Juan Vicente Gómez in 1935, young Caracas lawyer Lorenzo Alejandro Mendoza Fleury became the main partner of the family business "Mendoza y Compañía", which initially manufactured candles and soap. Four years later, Mendoza Fleury had the idea of establishing a brewing company together with Rafael Lujan and Karl Eggers. The project entailed great risks, but it began to take shape when the ship carrying the first brewing kettle from
Europe successfully crossed the ocean and finally arrived in Venezuela on Christmas 1939. On March 14, 1941, operations began at the new company called
Cervecería Polar, with entirely Venezuelan capital, in the small plant located in Antímano, west of
Caracas. The initiative was just beginning when in 1943, Carlos Roubicek (1916–2004), a young Jewish Czechoslovak brewmaster, joined the company after emigrating to
Ecuador following the military occupation of his country by
Nazi Germany. Four months after joining, Roubicek raised the need to change the formula of the beer produced at the plant, based on the public’s taste at the time, which, along with the right advertising, quickly made it a popular product. At that time, the company produced about 30,000 liters of beer per month and had 50 workers, facing competition from 14 other brands, which it overcame through product quality and a human sales team. In 1948, under the supervision of Juan Lorenzo Mendoza Quintero, son of Mendoza Fleury, the first distribution company of Cervecería Polar products was established.
Growth (1950–1999) In 1950, a second brewery began operations in
Barcelona,
Anzoátegui, in eastern Venezuela; the following year another plant was added in Los Cortijos,
Caracas, complementing the production of the Antímano plant. In 1960, another brewery was established in
Maracaibo to serve western Venezuela. By then, with three breweries in operation and with corn flakes (
maize) as one of the main ingredients of the beer formula devised by Roubicek, the company decided to build its own corn processing plant in
Turmero,
Aragua, in order to replace imports of this raw material. This decision would be a decisive step in the later development of the food business. In 1951, the first non-alcoholic beverage of
Cervecería Polar, called
Maltín Polar, was introduced. Carlos Eduardo Stolk Mendoza, cousin of Lorenzo Alejandro Mendoza Fleury, after representing
Venezuela at the
United Nations during
World War II, became president of Empresas Polar in 1952. His leadership contributed to a very important growth period until his retirement in 1985. Dr. Stolk was responsible for the name of the Harina P.A.N. brand and the launch of this project, and also took the first steps toward the creation and development of Fundación Polar, among other initiatives for customers, employees, and shareholders. The corn processing plant began in 1960 the production of the precooked corn flour
Harina P.A.N., based on Venezuelan patent 5176, acquired by the family company from Venezuelan mechanical engineer Luis Caballero Mejías, who invented the respective industrial process in 1954 for his own company
La Arepera, C.A. This launch made the preparation of the traditional Venezuelan
arepa less laborious, since it no longer required pilado maize but precooked corn flour. Juan Lorenzo Mendoza Quintero proposed the creation of the non-profit civil association “El Puntal,” aimed at reinforcing the social action already being carried out by the company’s facilities in their localities, both for workers and their families and for the community. This would be one of his last initiatives, as Mendoza Quintero died suddenly in 1962. In this circumstance, his father, Lorenzo Mendoza Fleury, resumed the leadership of the company, which incorporated other products such as corn oil in 1966 and animal feed in 1967, with the creation of
Procría. In 1969, Mendoza Fleury died and his other son, Lorenzo Alejandro Mendoza Quintero, a psychiatrist, assumed leadership. Under his guidance, a retirement plan for the company’s workers was created in 1972. He also promoted the idea of building a large brewery complex in the center of the country, whose construction began on December 5, 1975, in
San Joaquín,
Carabobo, and which started operating in 1978. In 1985, together with the French company Casa Martell, Empresas Polar founded
Bodegas Pomar, thus beginning commercial wine production in Venezuela. From 1986, the company entered the rice processing and packaging business and, the following year, into pasta and ice cream by acquiring
Helados EFE. In February 1987, Lorenzo Alejandro Mendoza Quintero died, and both his widow, Leonor Giménez de Mendoza, and his brother’s widow, Morella Pacheco Ramella, took over the management of the company. That year also marked the beginning of its food business in
Colombia, with offices in
Bogotá and a production plant for precooked corn flour, oats, and ready-to-eat arepas in
Facatativá, near the capital.
Expansion (1999–) The acquisition of the Pepsi brand license led to the construction of two large Pepsi-Cola Venezuela plants in
Caucagua and
Maracaibo in 1999. Subsequently, in 2001 the company acquired Mavesa and in 2002 incorporated products of the American brand
Quaker Oats Company, along with its subsidiary
Gatorade, both today owned by
PepsiCo. In 2003, the company consolidated under the name
Alimentos Polar and expanded its cleaning products plant in
Valencia, in 2009. That year, the Centro de Desarrollo Deportivo Empresas Polar opened in San Joaquín, where children and young people practice sports in an organized way. Finally, in 2010, Alimentos Polar partnered with the Spanish Grupo Leche Pascual, installing a yogurt plant in Valencia producing the Migurt product line. In 2012, the premium beer collection
Placeres Maestros of Solera was launched, beginning with Solera Märzen (a type of
Marzenbier). Later, in 2016, Solera Black (
Schwarzbier) and Solera ALT (
Altbier) were introduced under the same collection. Finally, in 2018, the first
India Pale Ale under the name Solera IPA was launched in the Venezuelan market. ==Products==