The San Francisco Bay Area company promotes eco-friendly vehicles, quality service, and a commitment to its corporate clientele.
Tim Crowley・Senior Editor
October 7, 2013
3 min to read
James Brown started El Paseo Limousine in 1986 when it was originally called Sterling Limousine.
El Paseo Limousine founder James Brown credits his success to wisdom from a legend: “‘We are in the customer service business, and we happen to drive passengers,’” he says, recounting an early mentorship from Art Miesemer of RMA Worldwide Transportation near Washington, D.C. Brown has taken this sentiment to heart while building up his San Francisco Bay Area company into the 70-vehicle fleet of today.
“I probably thought I’d get up to three or four cars and just leave it there,” Brown says of his early aspirations. But as his business practices succeeded and his company grew, Brown soon knew he would be in for the long haul. El Paseo Limousine got its start while Brown was working in the tow truck business in 1986. With 10 years of experience working the towing service, from driving to managing operations, Brown and a business partner decided to try out the limousine business. “We wanted to drive some flashy cars and have flashy passengers.”
Ad Loading...
The two started out with a single, six-passenger Lincoln stretch with a clean white paint job and blue cloth interior. It was called Sterling Limousine, and Brown did all of the chauffeuring until he was able to hire a second chauffeur and add a 1988 Krystal 85-in. Lincoln Town Car stretch limousine.
Heeding his mentor’s words, Brown strove to build a reputation by prioritizing customer service.
Growth And Rebranding Capitalizing on the stretch popularity of the time, Brown increased his fleet to five full stretch limousines and moved into an office. But in 1991 he decided to leave the limo business and sold Sterling Limousine to an interested buyer. Unfortunately, the buyer was unable to make the business profitable. With Brown still marginally invested in the brand, he decided to jump back in and save the business and also rebrand it as El Paseo Limousine.
“The reason I went to El Paseo as the name is because before I sold the business, I was located in a very upscale shopping center, which was called El Paseo De Saratoga, and my cars used to face the busy street, so I felt people could put the name and place together. So it was a good marketing decision that I just needed to get done real quick.”
With Brown back at the helm, the business thrived under the new name. Brown was quick to capitalize on the growing trend of Silicon Valley commuters and their attention to environmental and emission factors.
El Paseo invested in propane fueled buses for shuttle work, and became a founding member of the Limousine Environmental Action Partnership (LEAP), which helps ground transportation and limousine companies leverage their commitment to more environmental practices to generate increased profits.
Ad Loading...
El Paseo Limousine operates full-size coaches that can accommodate up to 55 passengers. It’s latest addition to the fleet is the eco-friendly Tesla Model S sedan.
Today, El Paseo Limousine runs a fleet of sedans, minibuses, stretches and SUVs, and has added a single Tesla Model S. Its clientele, about 90% corporate, likes the service so much it keeps re-upping contracts.
Training In Longevity Brown puts all new chauffeurs on a weeklong training program that includes initial ride-a-longs to El Paseo’s main service hubs and airports. They are taught traffic patterns and what roads to take during certain times of day, as well as safe driving habits and acting hospitable to clients at all times.
As for what has kept Brown in business this long, he says it all comes back to his passion for the industry. “It’s different every day, that’s what I love most. Every day you have different situations and different people, and you know you’re not going to come to work every day dealing with the same situations.”
FASTFACTS
El Paseo Worldwide Transportation Location: Santa Clara, Calif. Founded: 1986 Owner: James Brown Service region: Greater San Francisco Bay Area Fleet size: 70 Vehicle types/models: Sedans, stretches, SUVs, vans, mini buses, motorcoaches, hearse Employees: 90 Annual revenues: $6 million Key execs/managers: Cyrus Monsef dir. of operations Website:www.elpaseolimo.com Contact: (800) 546-6131
Lucid and Uber partner to provide at least 35,000 vehicles, backed by new investments totaling $750 million to support the deployment of autonomous fleets.
AVILOO recently appointed Brett Lippel as CEO of its North American operations with the intent to drive nationwide adoption of advanced battery-testing tech.
ChargePoint deployed more than 90 EV charging ports, adding new Level 2 infrastructure and management tools to support public and employee access to charging in Southern California.
Recent announcements from two automakers underscore a significant shift in the electric vehicle market, driven by EV losses and changing strategies. [VIDEO}
Off-grid charging assets have proven to be much more than stopgaps. Fleets can use those tools to hedge against grid delays, capacity bottlenecks, and other uncertainties.
Rivian and Uber plan to put the first 10,000 autonomous R2 robotaxis into service starting in 2028 and expand to multiple cities as part of a broader push.
Mitchell’s latest EV Collision Insights report found repairable claims for electrified vehicles continued to rise in 2025, even as new BEV sales declined slightly in the U.S.