Fraserburgh, Scotland: Refrigerated body and trailer builder Gray and Adams has been listed at No 163 in the 16th annual Sunday Times Pwc Top Track 250.
One of only 24 companies from Scotland, Gray and Adams beat its previous placing of 210 in the 2018 Top Track 250. Gray & Adams described this as especially pleasing in light of the challenges generated by Covid-19.
The Sunday Times Pwc Top Track 250 league table ranks Britain’s private mid-market growth companies with the biggest sales. It is compiled by Fast Track and published in The Sunday Times each October, with an awards event in November.
This year’s special Covid-19 edition of the awards highlights the essential contribution that mid-market companies, like Gray & Adams, have made to the UK during the pandemic from supporting the NHS to enabling remote working.
James and Peter Gray, joint managing directors, Gray and Adams, said in a statement: “It is a pleasure and a privilege to be recognised by these awards once more, especially in light of this being such a challenging year for businesses across the globe.
“Our team has worked incredibly hard throughout the challenges posed by Covid-19 to stay innovative, positive, and always look for a better way. This is integral to the considerable success and growth we have achieved together this year. We look forward to celebrating this achievement at the virtual awards event on Tuesday 17 November with a renewed focus on our continued growth in the year ahead.”

Gray and Adams started in 1957 in Fraserburgh, Scotland, making bespoke refrigerated and dry freight vehicles. Bespoke reefer bodies and trailers are stll its core business. Still a family-owned business, it employs more than 700 people at its base in Scotland and sites in Doncaster, Dunfermline and Newtownabbey.