'Washington Group International' provides integrated engineering, construction and management services to businesses and governments around the world. Based in
Boise, Idaho, it has approximately 25,000 employees working in over 40 states and more than 30 countries.
Its primary areas of expertise are: infrastructure, mining, industrial/process, energy & environment, and power.
Origins
At the age of 30,
Dennis R. Washington founded Washington Construction Company in
Missoula, Montana in
1964. He guided the company to the top of the civil construction market in
Montana, and expanded into mining, industrial construction, and environmental cleanup work. As his company grew into a major regional firm, Washington's vision for the future continued to expand also - leading to a series of acquisitions that produced the international company of today.
In
1993 it expanded its heavy civil construction-operation, when it merged with Kasler Corporation, a
California-based firm with large-scale operations in heavy-civil construction.
Morrison-Knudsen Co.
In
1996, the Washington Group acquired Morrison-Knudsen Co. of
Boise, the major construction company. M-K was one of the consortium of firms that built
Hoover Dam and the
San Francisco Bay Bridge, the
Trans-Alaska Pipeline and many other large projects of American infrastructure. M-K was also involved in the construction of rail projects such as the
BART extension (M-K also built the C2 cars for BART). It built the
California Cars as well as other rail passenger cars and light rail. It built locomotives under the MPI name brand, such as the MPI F40PH-C3.
M-K's origins date to
1905, when Morris Knudsen met Harry Morrison while working on the construction of the New York Canal (irrigation) in southwestern
Idaho. Knudsen was a fifty-something
Nebraska farmer (and
Danish immigrant) with a team of horses and a fresno scraper; Morrison was a 27 year-old concrete superintendent for the
Reclamation Service.
Their first venture together was in
1912, on a pump plant in nearby
Grand View, where they lost money but gained experience. For several years the firm built irrigation canals, logging roads, and railways. They incorporated in
1923, the year gross revenues topped $1 million.
During
World War II, M-K built airfields, storage depots, and ships, and it later expanded into foreign construction. It built the locks on the
St. Lawrence Seaway, the
DEW system,
Minuteman missile silos,
NASA's Kennedy Space Center, and over 100 major dams. Knudsen died in
1943, Morrison in
1971.
M-K was led into some risky non-core areas by
William Agee, who became
CEO in
1988, and was ousted by the
board of directors in February
1995. The company had been in financial difficulty for several years and declared bankruptcy that same year, it was purchased by Washington Group in
1996.
Additional growth
Growth by acquisition has brought the Washington Group into the top tier (by size) of American construction firms. However, Washington Group also declared bankruptcy - virtually eliminating all shareholder value. In
1999 it acquired the government-services operations of
Westinghouse Electric Company, becoming a science and technology services leader, and in
2000 the company expanded its market leadership by acquiring
Raytheon Engineers & Constructors, which owned Rust International, to produce one of the largest companies in the industry.
However, Washington Group entered bankruptcy in
2001, but later successfully exited it.
Its competitors include
Bechtel and
Fluor Corp..
Purchase of Washington Group International
On May 28, 2007, it was announced that
URS Corporation, based out of
San Francisco, California had reached an inital agreement with WGII Management to purchase the entire company for 2.6 billion dollars (U.S) (which is about $80.00 per share). According to the plan WGI will operate as a division of URS with the headquarters remaining in
Boise, Idaho. The final approval, however, requires a vote from the shareholders of WGII.
External links
★
Washington Group International official site
★
Merger Information Website from URS and WGI
References
"Idaho for the Curious", by Cort Conley, ©1982, ISBN 0-9603566-3-0, p. 403-404
★
The Wreck of Morrison Knudsen ''
Time,'' April 3, 1995
★
Idaho company recovers - ''
Seattle Times'', (AP), July 28, 2004