- April 24, 2026
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Siesta Key Hardware has retained its mom-and-pop charm, even though it is a far cry from the lone-cash-register store it once was. This year marks 40 years since Wally Von Atzinger and his business partner, Bill Podewitz, established the store in 1972.
Von Atzinger, a natural handyman, bought the store, located at 215 Canal Road in Siesta Key Village, from Podewitz after its first year of operation. He later passed it on to his daughter, Cheryl Duley, and her husband, John, who proposed to Cheryl in the store. The store holds decades of memories for the Duleys.
âMy dad always taught me, âFind something you would want to do with your life that you would do for free,â and the hardware store is something I would have done for free,â Duley says.
Von Atzingerâs wife, Nora, did the bookkeeping while his daughter helped run the store.
âWe werenât supposed to know what we were doing,â Duley says. âI mean, what the heck do I know about plumbing and electrical or installing a sprinkler system?â
When she first started working at the store, she absorbed all of her fatherâs handyman knowledge like a sponge.
âI used to just follow my dad around and listen to him wait on everybody in the first year or so,â she says.
She remembers a simpler Siesta Key, with chatty workmen eating lunches at the front of their shop.
âIt had tremendous character,â says Duley. âThere were a lot of stores in the Village, and sometimes they would be open, sometimes they wouldnât, there would be, like, âGone Fishingâ signs on the doors.â
Neighbors and customers quickly became friends who would bring their household questions to the store. Duley remembers one neighbor bringing in a broken toilet and another whoâs broken lawnmower filled the store with black smoke.
âThe same workmen would come in everyday, sometimes four to five times a day,â says Duley. âI think thatâs what made it so special, too â you donât get that at Home Depot â they really became friends.â
David Patton, a Siesta Key local, remembers riding his bike to the store, where he charged supplies to his fatherâs account.
âWally was a character. He was fun-loving and funny,â Patton says. âIf you needed something, he tried to get it for you. It might take him a week or 10 days, but he would get it for you.â
Patton still rides his bike to the store but makes charges to his own account.
The Duleys sold the store in 2005 after a bad storm season and after Duleyâs parents and grandmother died.
âThe store kind of defined who I was and I didnât know what I would do next,â says Duley. âI just decided not to look back.â
The next chapter
Siesta Key Hardware was passed through a few hands before its current owners, Jim and Patricia Hillier, bought it in 2006. Jim Hillier had a background as a racing sailboat captain; submarine technology engineer at Johns Hopkins; designer of printing software with his brother; and as an engineer at Mote Marine Aquarium.
âMy background is anything but retail,â Jim Hillier says, âbut, man, what an adventure.â
The Hilliers have kept the mom-and-pop business model but have made a few modern tweaks. Patricia Hillier revamped the storeâs interior design with beach-themed signs and a new tile mosaic store logo.
Jim Hillier added a computer-based ordering system, organized the inventory and installed a pricing formula to keep up with product prices.
âWe saw a lot of opportunity and, still, we work to preserve that little old-fashioned feel with a tropical hint,â Jim Hillier says.
Patton is still a loyal customer. He knows that the Hilliers have almost everything that the supercenters carry.
âItâs so convenient; why would you get in your vehicle and drive half-an-hour to 40 minutes to get somewhere?â he asks. âDo you know how many stop lights there are between here and Home Depot?â
And, just like in the old days, customers soon became friends. The Hilliers see familiar faces everywhere they go. Jim Hillier has nicknamed the island âMayberry Key,â based on the 1960s âThe Andy Griffith Showâ because of its close-knit community feel. âEverybody knows each other and we have our characters,â Jim Hillier says.
Although Duley doesnât look back, she is happy to see what the Hilliers have done with the store.
âI just think itâs fabulous and itâs still going, and that the Hilliers are doing well with it,â she says. âThey seem to be loving it as much as we did, which is really great.â
The Hilliers celebrated 40 years of the store with the community Wednesday, Dec. 12, with hotdogs, cake, drinks and prizes.
âThatâs what America is about, mom and pop and all of these little stores,â Patton says.