Ballast Nedam
Public | |
Traded as | Euronext: BALNE |
Industry | Construction, civil engineering, dredging |
Founded | Amsterdam, Netherlands (April 4, 1877 ) |
Headquarters | Nieuwegein, Netherlands |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Theo Bruijninckx (Chairman) |
Products | Bridges, Tunnels, Roads, Parkings, Railways |
Revenue | €1.384 billion (2009)[1] |
€17 million (2009)[1] | |
Profit | €6 million (2009)[1] |
Number of employees | 3,947 (2009)[1] |
Website | www.ballast-nedam.com |
Ballast Nedam is a Dutch-based construction and engineering company headquartered in Nieuwegein. The company as well as the name is a merge between Amsterdamse Ballast Maatschappij and Nederlandse Aannemingsmaatschappij. It's the fourth biggest Dutch construction and engineering company after Royal BAM Group, Heijmans and VolkerWessels.
History
Ballast
The existence of the Amsterdamsche Ballast Maatschappij can be attributed to the Noordzeekanaal. Its original operations back in 1877 were simplicity itself: empty merchant ships going to sea obtained dune sand as ballast. In later years, the company also applied itself to dredging. In the first decade of the 20th century, the company began to grow under the direction of Charles de Vilder, a paver and roadworker based in Amsterdam. Ballast evolved from a sand supplier to a construction firm, and from 1928 onwards, also operated as a concrete manufacturer. The introduction of the first labour-saving excavator in 1927 marked the automation of sand extraction. After the Second World War, Ballast focused increasingly on dredging operations – and later, on civil engineering works too – abroad. The firm established its reputation within Dutch borders with the construction of the Afsluitdijk in 1932 and the Velser tunnels in 1957.
Nedam
H.F. Boersma set up in business as a contractor in Den Haag from 1899 onwards. He began with the construction of villas and country houses, but earned his reputation through the construction of the Vredespaleis in 1913. Four years later Boersma founded the company Nederlandse Aannemingsmaatschappij N.V. The building activities went so well that by 1921 he had already begun to establish a building company in what was known at the time as the Dutch East Indies. Nedam became more widely known through the construction of The Hague Convention Bureau, the former Bijenkorf department store in Rotterdam, and the Nederlandsche Handels Maatschappij headquarters in Amsterdam, known as the Bazel building.
Merger
The Ballast Nedam Group came into being through the amalgamation of the two companies in 1969. The former Ballast contracts with the Middle East were extended, and Ballast Nedam was involved in the start of mammoth projects such as the Kuwait International Airport and the King Fahd Causeway, one of the longest cross-channel connections in the world. Works of distinction in the Netherlands include the development and construction of the Maarssenbroek district in the province of Utrecht, the Oosterscheldekering, the design of the modern Amsterdam Airport Schiphol and the construction of the Amsterdam Stopera in 1986. The Ballast Nedam Group grew as a result of the acquisition of Van Grootel’s Bouwmaatschappij in 1974. Three years later, the name was changed to Ballast Nedam B.V.
Ballast Nedam was purchased by British Aerospace in 1987 for £47 million. In October 1993 British Aerospace announced its intention to sell Ballast Nedam.[2] In May 1994, Ballast Nedam shares were once again quoted on the Amsterdam Stock Exchange, and the private limited company became a public limited company once more. The company strengthened its position in the Dutch market through acquisitions, but sold its dredging activities in 2002. Ballast Nedam then withdrew from the international project market and concentrated its activities mainly within the Netherlands, where the Ballast Nedam story all began.
Sponsorship
Ballast Nedam sponsor the "Bouw in Beeldprijs", an annual photography prize in the Netherlands.[3] The prize is awarded every year to a photographer who, in the eyes of the jury, has best captured the construction theme. The Bouw in Beeldprijs started in 2007.
Revenue and profit history
The loss over the year 2014 of €103 million was very large causing the company to ask for additional loans from banks and other partners.[4] The loss was mainly caused by the division of Infrastructure due to the project for broadening part of the national A15 highway in The Netherlands.[5] The company filed claims at the government for the enormous cost increase of this project. After announcing the loss over 2014, the company stated by one of its executives, Erik van der Noordaa,that the company will not execute such large and complex projects any more in future[4]
Year | Revenue | Profit |
---|---|---|
2014 | €1,166 billion | € -103,0 million |
2013 | €1,268 billion | € - 41,0 million |
2012 | €1,296 billion | € - 41,0 million |
2011 | €1,384 billion | € 9,0 million |
2010 | €1,359 billion | € 7,0 million |
2009 | €1,384 billion | € 6,0 million |
2008 | €1,426 billion | € 24,0 million |
2007 | €1,270 billion | € 27,0 million |
2006 | €1,310 billion | € 44,0 million |
2005 | €1,206 billion | € 20,0 million |
2004 | €1,164 billion | € 13,0 million |
Projects (selection)
- Peace Palace (1913) in The Hague, Netherlands
- Afsluitdijk (1933) between the Dutch provinces of North Holland and Friesland
- Zeeland Bridge (1965) between Schouwen-Duiveland and Noord-Beveland in the province of Zeeland, Netherlands
- Kuwait International Airport in Farwaniyah, Kuwait, 15.5 kilometers (9.6 mi) south of Kuwait City
- Botlek Tunnel (1980) between two sides of the Maas river in Rotterdam, Netherlands
- King Fahd Causeway (1986) between Saudi-Arabia and Bahrain[6]
- Oosterscheldekering (1986) between Schouwen-Duiveland and Noord-Beveland[7]
- Amsterdam Arena (1996) soccer stadium of AFC Ajax in Amsterdam, Netherlands[8]
- Confederation Bridge (1997) between Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick in Canada[9]
- Great Belt Fixed Link (1998) between the Zealand and Funen across the Great Belt in Denmark[10]
- New Douglas Park (2001) soccer stadium of Hamilton Academical in Lanarkshire, Scotland[11]
- Euroborg (2006) soccer stadium of FC Groningen in Groningen, Netherlands[12]
- Windpark Egmond aan Zee (2007): the first large scale offshore wind farm built off the Dutch North Sea coast[13]
- HSL-Zuid (2009): 125 km-long high-speed railway line between Netherlands and Belgium[14]
External links
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ballast Nedam. |
- 1 2 3 4 "Annual Report 2009" (PDF). Ballast Nedam. Retrieved 2011-01-08.
- ↑ "BAe will sell Ballast". The Independent.
- ↑ "Actueel".
- 1 2 "No more complex projects". nu.nl. 1 May 2015. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
- ↑ de Voogt, Sam (1 May 2015). "Dramatic loss of 103 million euro". NRC Handelsblad (in Dutch). Retrieved 1 May 2015.
- ↑ "AsiaRooms.com Community - Travel Blog". AsiaRooms.com Community.
- ↑ "Deltawerken - Cooperation".
- ↑ The making of Amsterdam Arena
- ↑ "Confederation Bridge".
- ↑ "The final span over the Öresund". Hochtief. Retrieved 8 January 2011.
- ↑ Shields, Tom (2001-07-29). "Nice new stadium, shame about the name". The Sunday Herald.
- ↑ 10 million euro orders for Olympic Stadium in Berlin and Euroborg Stadium in Groningen Archived December 28, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. Imtech, 8 April 2004
- ↑ Shell Begins Construction at Egmond aan Zee Offshore Wind Farm Oil Voice, 20 April 2006
- ↑ HSL-Zuid starts to take shape 1 April 2002