Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft
Private | |
Industry | Shipbuilding |
Genre | Shipbuilding |
Founded | 1838 |
Founder | August Howaldt and Johann Schweffel |
Headquarters | Kiel, Germany |
Products |
Passenger ships Cargo ships U-boats Warships |
Owner | ThyssenKrupp |
Number of employees | 2,400 |
Parent | ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems |
Website | www.hdw.de |
Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft (often abbreviated HDW) is a German shipbuilding company, headquartered in Kiel. It is part of the ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems (TKMS) group, owned by ThyssenKrupp The Howaldtswerke shipyard was founded in Kiel in 1838 and merged with Hamburg-based Deutsche Werft to form Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft (HDW) in 1968. The company's shipyard was formerly used by Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft until the end of World War II.
History
HDW was founded October 1, 1838 in Kiel by engineer August Howaldt and entrepreneur Johann Schweffel under the name Maschinenbauanstalt und Eisengießerei Schweffel & Howaldt (Machine Factory and Iron Foundry Schweffel & Howaldt), initially building boilers.
The first steam engine for naval purposes was built in 1849 for the Von der Tann, a gunboat for the small navy of Schleswig-Holstein. In 1850, the company built an early submarine, Brandtaucher, designed by Wilhelm Bauer. It had been intended to build the boat in Rendsburg but Danish forces advanced too close during the First Schleswig War, so construction was moved to Kiel.
The first ship built under the company's new name Howaldtswerke was a small steamer, named Vorwärts, built in 1865. Business expanded rapidly as Germany became a maritime power and, by the start of the 20th century, around 390 ships had been completed.
In 1892 the company started a subsidiary in Austrian-Hungarian Fiume on the coast of the Adriatic Sea. The subsidiary closed ten years later but the yard remains open under the name 3. Maj.
With Kiel being one of the two main bases of the Kaiserliche Marine, the shipyard also benefited much from navy maintenance, repair and construction contracts. During World War I the company also built a number of U-boats. By 1937, the company had yards in Kiel and in Hamburg, and was taken over by the Kriegsmarine. During World War II, Howaldtswerke built 33 VIIC U-boats in Hamburg and 31 in Kiel.
After the end of World War II, Howaldtswerke was the only major shipyard in Kiel that was not dismantled. The yard flourished during the "economic miracle" of the 1960s, with the construction of freighters and tankers, and again expanded by opening a shipyard in Hamburg. In 1968 Howaldtswerke merged with Deutsche Werft in Hamburg, and the company took the new name Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft (HDW). Pressure from cheaper competitors in Japan and South Korea caused the closure of the Hamburg yard in 1985.
In March 2002 the American financial investor One Equity Partner (OEP) took the majority of the Babcock AG at HDW. Shortly after that the Babcock AG had to file for insolvency and called for a reserved transaction, but the OEP was able to avoid this.[1]
In January 2005, HDW became a subsidiary of ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems (TKMS), which also part-owned Kockums of Malmö, Sweden and 24.9% of Hellenic Shipyards Co. of Skaramangas, Greece. The group employs around 6,600 workers. In 2009, HDW worked with Kockums and Northrop Grumman to offer a Visby class corvette derivative in the American Focused Mission Vessel Study, a precursor to the Littoral combat ship program.
In July 2011, TKMS announced that it has confirmed an existing deal to sell the civilian shipbuilding assets of HDW Gaarden to Abu Dhabi MAR.[2][3][4][5]
Ships built by HDW (selection)
Civilian
- Bungsberg (1924)
- Christina O Aristotle Onassis (1952) Luxury yacht
- Otto Hahn (1968), nuclear powered freighter
- Tor Britannia (1975), cruiseferry
- Tor Scandinavia (1976), cruiseferry
- MS Bahamas Celebration (1981), cruiseferry
- Astor (1981), cruise ship
- PFS Polarstern (1982), research icebreaker
- Astor (1987), cruise ship
- Superfast VII (2001), fast ropax ferry
- Superfast VIII (2001), fast ropax ferry
- Superfast IX (2002), fast ropax ferry
- Superfast X (2002), fast ropax ferry
Naval
Frigates
- Hamburg (F220), a Sachsen class frigate
- Kasturi class frigate, two frigates built for the Royal Malaysian Navy
- SAS Isandlwana (F146)
- SAS Mendi (F148)
- Schleswig-Holstein (F216), a Brandenburg class frigate
Corvettes
- Braunschweig class corvettes
Submarines (U-boats)
- Type 800 Dolphin class submarines
- Type 205 submarines
- Type 206 submarines
- Type 209 submarines
- Type 212 submarines
- Type 214 submarines[6]
- Type 216 submarines (Proposed design)
Gunboats
See also
Notes
- ↑
- Torsten Oltmanns, Ralf-Dieter Brunowsky: Re: think CEO 2. Managers in the media trap (abstract; in German), original title: Manager in der Medienfalle, BrunoMedia, Cologne 2009, ISBN 978-3-9811506-7-4, S. 35
- ↑ "Blohm+Voss Sale to Abu Dhabi MAR Falls Through". megayachtnews.com. July 1, 2011. Retrieved Nov 22, 2011.
- ↑ "Planned Blohm + Voss sale falls through". motorship.com. July 4, 2011. Retrieved Nov 22, 2011.
- ↑ "Abu Dhabi MAR-German deal 'falls through'". thenational.ae. July 2, 2011. Retrieved Nov 22, 2011.
- ↑ "German Shipbuilding Restructured: UAE’s Firm Buys Blohm+Voss". defenseindustrydaily.com. July 7, 2011. Retrieved Nov 22, 2011.
- ↑ "ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems showcases its modern submarines at IMDEX Asia 2013". May 13, 2013.
External links
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Coordinates: 54°19′08″N 10°09′20″E / 54.31889°N 10.15556°E
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