Heidelberg Materials UK | |
Type: | Subsidiary |
Foundation: | as Hanson Trust Ltd |
Location: | London, England |
Key People: | Simon Willis (Chief executive officer) |
Industry: | Minerals |
Products: | Building materials |
Revenue: | £4,133m (2006) |
Operating Income: | £563m (2006) |
Net Income: | £401m (2006) |
Num Employees: | 3,500 (2019) |
Parent: | HeidelbergCement |
Heidelberg Materials UK is a British-based building materials company, headquartered in Maidenhead. Previously known as Hanson UK, the company has been a subsidiary of the German company HeidelbergCement since August 2007, and was formerly listed on the London Stock Exchange and a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index.
Originally known as Hanson Trust plc, the company was built up by James Hanson, later Lord Hanson, and Gordon White, later Baron White of Hull, who created Hanson Trust out of the former Wiles Group in 1964.[1] Their principal strategy was the pursuit of shareholder value through acquisition.
Hanson and White were willing to take a wide range of measures to do so, including mass redundancies, and therefore attracted opposition and accusations that they were asset strippers.[2] From 1979, the company was successful from the shareholders' point of view and respected during the early 1980s, with Hanson (who gave millions of pounds to the Conservatives) admired by Margaret Thatcher.[3]
One of the most notable takeovers, at least to the general public, was the acquisition in 1983, of the United Drapery Stores,[2] or UDS Group, which owned many of Britain's most well known high street clothes shops and department stores, including John Collier, Richard Shops and the chain of Allders department stores. To fund this purchase, Hanson broke up UDS and sold John Collier to a management buy out team, and Richard Shops to Habitat, keeping only the core department store business.[4] In January 1986, Hanson bought SCM, an American chemicals to typewriters business.[5] This included the paper division that was formerly the Allied Paper Corporation. Hanson sold most of the SCM business units and the headquarters building in New York City for a significant profit.[6]
Its most significant single purchase, however, was probably its takeover of Imperial Tobacco Group in 1986.[2] Hanson paid £2.5 billion for the group then undertook a major reorganisation; divestitures netted £2.3 billion, leaving Hanson with the hugely profitable tobacco business for "next to nothing."[2] Hanson sold off the food brand, Golden Wonder, to Dalgety plc in 1986.[7]
In November 1988, Hanson went on to buy Consolidated Gold Fields for £3.5bn.[2] The Gold Survey was taken on by a new company, now known as GFMS. An attempt in September 1991, to purchase Imperial Chemical Industries, once seen by many in Britain as the nation's leading company but then in decline, was highly controversial, and ended in failure.[2] Hanson did secure the takeover of Beazer, a major housebuilder, that year.[8]
By the mid-1990s, conglomerates were no longer popular with the investment community. Some of the manufacturing businesses were spun off as US Industries in February 1995.[9] In January 1996, Hanson ended its time as a diversified conglomerate by breaking itself up into four separate listed companies: Hanson plc, Imperial Tobacco, The Energy Group and Millennium Chemicals.[1] This cost the group £95 million in professional fees by August 1996.[10]
Lord Hanson stepped down as chairman in December 1997.[2] Led by Andrew Dougal, chief executive from 1997 until 2002,[11] Hanson focused on building materials, becoming the world's biggest aggregates supplier and the second largest supplier of ready-mixed concrete.[12] In November 1999, Hanson acquired Australian building materials business Pioneer International.[13]
Dougal quit the group in early 2002 to "rebalance" his life, leaving with a controversially large pay-off (variously reported at between £400,000 and £660,000, plus a pension top-up of £636,700).[14] [15]
In May 2007, HeidelbergCement announced its intent to purchase Hanson PLC for £11 per share, a deal worth approximately £8 billion. This deal made the combined company the second largest cement and building materials company in the world. The transaction was completed through Heidelberg subsidiary Lehigh UK on 22 August 2007.[16] In December 2014, Heidelberg Cement agreed to sell its Hanson Building Products division to the private equity firm Lone Star for £900 million.[17]
As of 2023, Hanson is planning to build a new carbon capture facility which aims to reduce the emissions from their current Padeswood cement works. The UK government chose Hanson, along with other companies, to show progress plans for carbon reducing solutions.[18]
In October 2023, the company announced that it was rebranding as Heidelberg Materials, as part as a branding rationalisation by its parent company.[19]
The principal markets of Heidelberg Materials UK are the major conurbations in England and Wales and the central belt of Scotland.[20] The company supplies heavy building materials such as ready-mixed concrete, asphalt and cement to the UK construction industry.[21]
In March 2024, residents of Glyncoch, near Pontypridd in South Wales, started a series of protests around the over-riding of the local authority's opposition to extend quarrying, by the Minister of Climate Change, Julie James. This successful appeal will allow a further 15.7 million tonnes of rock to be extracted for road surfacing and runways. The quarry operations will continue until 2047 and will come within 164 meters of schools and housing as well as destroying a community green space and a wildlife sanctuary.[22]
The appeal report claimed that "The dust assessments concluded that the potential impacts associated with both the continuation of existing activities and the proposed extension would be slight adverse at most." and that "From all that I have seen and read there are no objections or concerns relating to landscape, visual impact, ecology, hydrology, cultural heritage, agricultural land quality impacts" [23]