Beca Group Explained

Beca Group Limited
Type:Private
Industry:Professional Services Consultancy
Foundation:1920
Founder:Arthur Gray
Location:Auckland
Locations:25
Area Served:Asia-Pacific
Key People:Amelia Linzey (CEO)
Revenue:NZD $541.2 million (2018)
Num Employees:4,300

Beca (officially Beca Group Limited) is one of the largest employee-owned professional services consultancy firms in the Asia-Pacific region. The company has more than 4,300 staff working across 25 offices around the globe, with headquarters located in Auckland, New Zealand.[1]

History

Beca was founded in 1920 by Arthur Gray on his return to New Zealand after World War I, where he purchased an engineering practice that would later become Gray and Watts, then Gray Watts & Beca. A merger with Wellington firm Hollings & Ferner in 1968 formed Beca, Carter, Hollings & Ferner, with the firm eventually known as Beca Group Ltd.[2]

The company's name reflects the contribution of George Beca, CBE, DFC, D.Eng (Hon) (1921–2001), who joined the partnership of Gray and Watts in the early 1950s and led the firm for many years.[3] Beca has had several name changes following amalgamations. Beca Steven existed from 1989 to 2001 after amalgamation of Beca Carter Hollings & Ferner with Steven Fitzmaurice & Partners.

Earthquake Engineering

Beca has a long-standing reputation for excellence in earthquake engineering. John Hollings (founding partner of Hollings & Ferner) is regarded as the 'father of capacity design',[4] with his design for the Jerningham Apartment building in Wellington (completed in 1968) demonstrating the 'strong columns, weak beams' design philosophy that is the foundation for modern earthquake resilience in structures and features in almost all international seismic design codes.

The company was the engineer for the world's first base isolated structure: the South Rangitikei Viaduct, a 78 metre high, 315 metres long concrete railway viaduct completed in 1981, where the piers can 'step' up to 13cm off their foundations under earthquake loads, dissipating the earthquake's energy without causing any major structural damage.[5]

More recently, Beca's seismic retrofit work has been recognised with major international structural engineering awards, including the retrospective base isolation of lift shafts at Victoria University of Wellington's Rankine Brown Library[6] and seismic retrofit of 8 Willis Street,[7] [8] an office building in central Wellington.

Awards

Beca was named the Best Provider to Power & Utilities sector at the 2019 Financial Review Client Choice Awards.[9]

2018[10]

2017[11]

2015[12]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About Beca . Beca . 2 April 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100307121540/http://www.beca.com/About_Beca.aspx . 7 March 2010 .
  2. Web site: The global transformation of Beca . stuff.co.nz . 22 July 2013 . 22 June 2016.
  3. Web site: Obituary: George Beca . New Zealand Herald . 1 June 2001 . 12 April 2017.
  4. Fardis . Michael . July 2018 . Capacity Design: Early History . Earthquake Engineering & Structural Dynamics . 47 . 14 . 2887–2896 . 10.1002/eqe.3110 . 2018EESD...47.2887F . 116644193 . Wiley Online Library.
  5. Web site: 15 October 2018 . Innovative KiwiRail bridge recognised . 12 September 2023 . KiwiRail .
  6. Web site: 11 November 2022 . Rankine Brown Library - The Institution of Structural Engineers . 12 September 2023 . www.istructe.org .
  7. Web site: 8 Willis Street - The Skyscraper Center . 12 September 2023 . www.skyscrapercenter.com.
  8. Web site: 10 November 2023 . 8 Willis Street: Winner 2023 . 24 November 2023 . The Institution of Structural Engineers.
  9. Web site: 2019 Client Choice Awards Winners. 28 March 2019.
  10. Web site: 2018 Client Choice Awards Winners. 27 March 2019.
  11. News: Be nice, be honest: how KMPG, Nous, GTA and Beca win and keep clients. 8 March 2017. Financial Review. 7 September 2017.
  12. Web site: 2015 Client Choice Awards Finalists and Winners. 28 March 2019.