Aurecon

Aurecon
Company typePrivate, owned in trust
IndustryEngineering, Design and Business Consultation
PredecessorAfricon
Connell Wagner
Ninham Shand
Founded2009
HeadquartersDocklands, Victoria, Australia
Key people
RevenueA$1.06 billion (2020)[1]
A$64.5 million [1]
Number of employees
6,500+
Websitewww.aurecongroup.com

Aurecon Group Pty Ltd is an Australian engineering, management, design, planning, project management, consulting and advisory company based in Docklands, Victoria, with operations in Australia, New Zealand and Southeast Asia.

History

Formed through the merger of three engineering consultancies, Africon, Connell Wagner and Ninham Shand.[2] Aurecon has over 6,500 staff members. The company operates in 28 countries across Africa, Asia-Pacific and the Middle East.

Africon was formed in 1935. The original business, Van Wyk en Louw Consulting, grew as one of the 'top 5' engineering consulting firms under apartheid, winning lucrative government contracts including management of 'townships' before changing its name to Africon during South Africa's transformation to democracy. At the time of the merger, Africon was ranked amongst the world’s top 200 international design firms and was South Africa’s largest engineering company. The organisation operated in both the public and private sectors within the fields of transportation, property, municipal services, energy and mining.

Connell Wagner was one of Asia Pacific’s largest multi-disciplinary engineering consultancies, with a history spanning more than 75 years.[3] The firm provided a broad range of professional technical services across several market sectors, namely buildings, industrial, transportation, urban development, water, international development, environment, energy, telecommunications and defence.

Established in 1935, Ninham Shand was one of South Africa’s leading, privately owned companies of consulting engineers and environmental scientists. The organisation offered consulting services in areas including water resources and supply, heavy engineering, purification, infrastructure services, structures and buildings, transportation and roads, and environmental science.

In October 2019, Aurecon decided to demerge its African business.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b "The consulting company growing amid COVID-19". Australian Financial Review. August 25, 2020.
  2. ^ "Connell Wagner engineers entry into South Africa". Sydney Morning Herald. March 11, 2009. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
  3. ^ "Connell Wagner deploys Open Text E-document solution". CRN.
  4. ^ "Aurecon to separate from its African business". Aurecon. 22 October 2019.