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Philipp Holzmann

Former German building company

Philipp Holzmann

Summary

Former German building company

FieldValue
namePhilipp Holzmann AG
logo[[File:Holzmann logo.png200pxPhilipp Holzmann AG]]
foundation1849
defunct2002
fateLiquidation
locationFrankfurt am Main, Germany
industryConstruction
key_peopleJohann Philipp Holzmann, founder
website

Philipp Holzmann AG was a German construction company based in Frankfurt am Main.

History

Philipp Holzmann warehouse in Frankfurt am Main in 1875
The [[Frankfurter Büro Center]] which was built by Philipp Holzmann

Early years

The company was founded in 1849 by Johann Philipp Holzmann (1805-1870) at Sprendlingen in present-day Dreieich near Frankfurt am Main as Philipp Holzmann & Cie. Initially, the former sawmill company was concentrating on the supply of ties for railway construction, but then began to expand into building construction and civil engineering. In 1856, the headquarters moved to Frankfurt where in the late 19th century the company experienced rapid growth.

The first large building contract to be finished was the opera house completed in 1880, followed by the central station in Frankfurt am Main completed in 1888 the Hamburg city hall completed in 1897 and several railway projects in East Africa and Asia, especially the Bagdadbahn built from 1903 which incorporates the Istanbul Haydarpaşa railway station finished in 1908, as well as the Varda Viaduct at Taurus Mountains in southern Turkey completed in 1916.

In 1917, Philipp Holzmann & Cie merged with the Internationale Baugesellschaft and became the publicly traded Philipp Holzmann Aktiengesellschaft. In 1938, the company had 20,800 employees and contributed to several major building projects like the new Reich Chancellery in Berlin, the Nazi party rally grounds in Nürnberg, the Prora complex as well as the Westwall and numerous sections of the Reichsautobahn. In World War II, Holzmann constructed large parts of the Atlantic Wall by order of the Organisation Todt.

Post-war years

In the post-war period, the company soon recovered with the rebuilding of Frankfurt, the airport and several public infrastructure projects. Post-war projects included the General Rafael Urdaneta Bridge in Venezuela completed in 1962, the AfE-Turm in Frankfurt completed in 1972, the Westend Gate in Frankfurt completed in 1976, the Eurotower in Frankfurt completed in 1977 and the Silberturm in Frankfurt completed in 1978. These projects enabled Holzmann to expand into the United States and in 1979 it acquired J.A. Jones Construction, a major US contractor.

More recent major projects involving Holzmann included the Frankfurter Büro Center in Frankfurt completed in 1980, the Eurotheum in Frankfurt completed in 1999, the Main Tower in Frankfurt completed in 2000, the Trianon in Frankfurt completed in 2003 and the Western Scheldt Tunnel in the Netherlands also completed in 2003.

Decline

At its peak in 1994, the company had 43,000 employees and was with a revenue of 13.1 billion DM the largest German construction company. Despite public efforts for a recapitalization, the company filed for insolvency in 1999 and was finally liquidated in 2002.

References

Sources

References

  1. Groß, p. 50
  2. (24 November 1999). "Germany Fails in Effort To Keep Builder Afloat".
  3. Fiedler, Martin. (1999b). "Die 100 größten Unternehmen von 1938 - ein Nachtrag". Verlag C.H. Beck.
  4. Pohl, p. 252
  5. "General Rafael Urdaneta Bridge (Maracaibo, 1962)".
  6. "AfE-Turm (Frankfurt, 1972)".
  7. "Plaza Büro Center (Frankfurt, 1976)".
  8. "Eurotower (Frankfurt, 1977)".
  9. "Silberturm (Frankfurt, 1978)".
  10. [https://books.google.com/books?id=syIrAAAAYAAJ&dq=J.A.+Jones+construction+Philipp+Holzmann+AG+merger&pg=PA83 ''Building for tomorrow: global enterprise and the U.S. construction industry''], National Research Council (U.S.), 1988 p. 82
  11. "Frankfurter Bürocenter (FBC) (Frankfurt, 1980)".
  12. "Eurotheum (Frankfurt, 1999)".
  13. "Main Tower (Frankfurt, 1999)".
  14. "Trianon (Frankfurt, 1993)".
  15. "Westerschelde Tunnel (Terneuzen/Nieuwdorp, 2003)".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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