Sir Lindsay Parkinson

Sir Lindsay Parkinson & Company Ltd
Public company
Industry Civil engineering
Fate Bought by Fairclough
Successor Leonard Fairclough & Son (AMEC)
Founded 13 July 1937
Founder Albert Lindsay Parkinson
Defunct 4 September 1974
Headquarters Lindsay House, 88 Upper Richmond Road, Putney, SW15
Area served
UK, Australia, Egypt, Cyprus, Portugal
Services Road construction
Subsidiaries Wentworth Estate

Sir Lindsay Parkinson & Company Ltd, commonly known as Sir Lindsay Parkinson & Co. Ltd or Lindsay Parkinson was a large civil engineering company in the UK.

History

A. Lindsay Parkinson by Ernest Townsend, 1918

The original name of the firm, registered about 1877, was Jacob Parkinson and Company, and Jacob operated a joiner's shop in Blackpool. His four sons worked in the business, one of whom was the eponymous Lindsay Parkinson. Joinery developed into general building work and in the early 1900s Parkinson's contracts included the Talbot Hotel and Alhambra Theatre in Blackpool. A contract to build the Theatre Royal in Newcastle led to the opening of an office in that city; a number of theatres were built in other towns in the north and the midlands. By the time of the First War, the Company had a London office.[1]

The First War expanded the range of contracts, which now included aerodromes and railway sidings. When peace came, the firm became involved in large-scale housing schemes (including the Parkinson-Kahn reinforced concrete house) and a wider range of civil engineering work – including new trunk roads. Lindsay Parkinson was knighted for public services and the Company took on his new name.[1]

Public company

On 13 July 1937 it was incorporated as a public company, technically known as Sir Lindsay Parkinson Holdings Limited. The shares were issued by Robert Benson & Co. Ltd (later Kleinwort Benson from 1961), based on 22 Old Broad Street.

The Directors of the company were Lt-Col George Westhead Parkinson MC (the chairman), Albert Edward Parkinson (managing director), Edward Parkinson, and Captain Constantine Evelyn Benson DSO. It was based at Lindsay House, 171 Shaftesbury Avenue (moving to the bottom of Waterloo Road in 1955). There was also an office at Talbot Saw Mills in Blackpool.

In May 1939 the company lent £200,000 to the British government, on an interest-free loan.

On 20 December 1943 the Chairman of the company, Lt-Col G.W.Parkinson, was killed after his car hit a lorry at Bedfont on the Great South-West Road. He was aged 69. The managing director since 1937, A.E.Parkinson, became chairman.

The Parkinson Strip Mining Company opened at Ewart Hill.

Contracts

M62 looking east towards the Rakewood Viaduct

On 5 July 1957 it began building its first motorway, the Lancaster bypass. The contract included 27 bridges. It was hampered by bad weather in 1958, but the summer of 1959 had good weather. It was opened on Monday 11 April 1960 by Charles Hill, Baron Hill of Luton and cost £4 million.[2] In December 1960 it was given a £2.2 million contract for the preparation of Oldbury Nuclear Power Station. In June 1961 they were given the £5.9 million contract for nine miles of the M6 (Birmingham – Preston Motorway) in Cheshire north of the Staffordshire boundary. In February 1963 they were given a contract for preparations for Kingsnorth power station. In September 1963 it was awarded a £3.7 million contract for the Belfast south approach road, which was seven miles of motorway. In July 1964 they were awarded the £4.3 million contract for the Coldra-Crick section of the London – South Wales motorway (M4), which was nine miles of motorway with an 830 ft viaduct at Coldra and a 720 ft viaduct of the Nedern Valley. They had also been awarded the £5.5 million contract for the seven-mile Newport By-Pass Road (M4), both sections of the M4 opened in March 1967; the Brynglas Tunnels were built by Sir Robert McAlpine. It was awarded a £300,000 contract to connect the M5 with the M6 on an elevated section, with most bridge structure made by Dorman Long of Middlesbrough. It built the main printing works for the Nigerian Security Printing and Minting Company Limited on Victoria Island in Lagos. In July 1965 it was given the £7 million contract for a seven-mile motorway between Lurgan and Birches in Armagh.

They opened their new headquarters in December 1965 in Putney. In March 1966 they opened the £3.3 million motorway (M1) section from Sprucefield to Moira, and had been awarded the £7.5 million contract to extend it to Craigavon.[3] In 1968 it was awarded the £6.75 million contract for the South of Quinton to Great Barr Section of the Midland Links Motorway (M5).[4] In November 1968 it was awarded the £12.4 million contract for a thirteen-mile section of the M62. In January 1970 it was awarded the £9.2 million contract for the M4 section between Wickham and Theale. In June 1972 it was awarded a £5 million contract for the Ellesmere Port motorway. In February 1973 it was awarded the £4.5 million contract for the Bury easterly bypass southern section.

The Company has produced two books which are predominantly lists and pictures of contracts; This way Forward, cited below, and Sir Lindsay Parkinson and Company (undated early 1970s?).

Takeover

In 1973, due to strikes, it suffered an £858,000 loss. In August 1974 it was taken over by Leonard Fairclough & Son, based at Sandiway House in Northwich. In 1982 this company merged with William Press Group to form AMEC.

Housing

For housing estates and maisonettes, it used the Parkwall System of construction. For tower blocks from 8 to 20 storeys it used the Bison Wall Frame System.

Structure

From 1955 through December 1965, the administrative Head Office was at 6 Lambeth Road, St. George's Circus, London SW1, (telephone WATerloo 4922). This was near to both the Elephant & Castle and Lambeth North Tube Stations, and a short bus ride (#10 and 44, both of which stopped at the door) from London Bridge Station. During this period, a branch office, connected by telex, was maintained in Leeds.

Late in 1965, the phased move to the (then) new company-built head office (at 86–88 Upper Richmond Road, Putney SW15) commenced, although, when the writer left to move to Canada in December 1965, the cost-accounting department run by the great Sam Shinwell was still based in 6, Lambeth Road. In August 1966, when I visited the Putney Office, while in transit through the UK, the move from the "old" location in St. George's Circus was complete.

(Of possible historical note is that, having remained vacant for several years, planning permission for the demolition of 86–88, Upper Richmond Road was granted in 2011 by Wandsworth Borough Council with the intent that the site be occupied by a new development. A sad final end for all who worked for SLP over the many many years!)

The site of the original office, 171, Shaftesbury Avenue, was demolished about 2012.

Products

Structures

Roads

Reservoirs

References