Business Specialties Development
KBR to Acquire BE&K for $550M
May 7, 2008
By: Scott Baltic, Contributing Editor

KBR, a Houston-based global engineering, construction and services company, has announced that it will acquire BE&K Inc., a privately held, Birmingham, Ala.–based engineering, construction and maintenance services company, in a transaction valued at $550 million.

The closing is scheduled for July, subject to regulatory approval. A conference call this morning reported that BE&K had revenues of approximately $2.0 billion in the year ended March 30, 2008, with a backlog of a similar amount. The company ranks in the top 10 for food processing plant contracting and chemical plant contracting, among other areas, according to Engineering News-Record magazine. ENR also ranked BE&K as the 39th largest design firm and the 48th largest contractor in 2007.

The conference call also noted that the acquisition complements KBR’s Gulf Coast presence with BE&K’s footprint in the Southeast. BE&K also has offices in Poland and Russia, while KBR has offices in the United Kingdom, Australia and Singapore.

Robert Cassidy, editor in chief of Building Design & Construction magazine, told CPN that while mergers and acquisitions have been reasonably common on the design side recently, such consolidations are noticeably less common on the construction side. He attributes this, at least in part, to the fact that “It’s a bigger bite,” since the companies are on average so much larger.

Formerly a Halliburton subsidiary known as Kellogg Brown & Root Inc., and with origins going back to 1901, KBR was spun off as a separate company again in April 2007. It employs more than 50,000 people and is currently the largest contractor for the U.S. Army and a top-10 contractor for the U.S. Department of Defense.

 
Recent Development Headlines
San Francisco's Transbay Officials Lock in Architect with $105M Contract
The board of directors for The Transbay Joint Powers Authority has signed off on an agreement with Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects for the firm's design of the new Transbay Transit Center & Tower, which will feature 1.6 million square feet of office space.
ProLogis to Increase Presence in Fort Worth with New 2MSF Park
Later this year, Denver-headquartered ProLogis will commence development of ProLogis Park Fort Worth on a 130-acre site in the North Fort Worth submarket. At full build-out the industrial complex will encompass seven structures containing a total of 2.1 million square feet of distribution space.
Algodon Mansion IPG to Add Luxury Hotel to Argentine Wine Resort
The city of San Rafael, in western Argentina, has approved a major expansion of Algodon Wine Estates, a winery and luxury resort, an expansion that will include a luxury hotel of about 50 suites, according to an announcement by InvestProperty Group L.L.C.,  the resort’s developer and owner.
Rudin, St. Vincent’s Hospital May Revamp Greenwich Village Plan
New York City is a tough place to build, and no areas are more challenging to developers than the city’s historic neighborhoods, as the experience of the Rudin Organization and St. Vincent’s Hospital Manhattan has just proved again.
donovan Second, Third-Tier Cities New Hotspots for Corporate Development: Report
Second-, and even third-tier cities, should be on corporations’ radar screens. They are good places to locate new manufacturing plants, call centers and IT hubs, a study on corporate development hot spots has concluded.