Pell Frischmann

Pell Frischmann
Private Limited
Industry Engineering Consulting
Founded 1926
Founder Cecil Pell
Headquarters London, United Kingdom
Number of locations
Offices in 6 countries
Key people
  • Jürgen Wild (Chairman)
  • Tushar Prabhu (Chief Executive)
  • Richard Barrett (Chief Executive)
  • Wilem Frischmann (CBE)
    (Former Chairman)
  • Sudhakar S. Prabhu
    (Former Deputy Chairman)
  • Keith Clarke[1]
    (Former Deputy Chairman)
Products Engineering Consultancy Services
Services Consultancy services
Revenue £ 23.7 million (2012)
Number of employees
1000+
Slogan Excellence through innovation
Website www.pellfrischmann.com

Pell Frischmann (PF) is a multi-disciplinary engineering consultancy based in London that provides structural and civil engineering, planning, design, and consulting services. Pell Frischmann employs over 1000 staff worldwide with 8 offices across the UK and international offices in India, the Middle East, Turkey and Romania.

The original company was founded by Cecil Pell in the 1920s who entered partnership with Wilem W Frischmann in the early 70s forming Pell Frischmann and Partners. In 2003 the umbrella company became Pell Frischmann Consulting Engineers. Major subsidiaries of the company include Frischmann Prabhu operating in the Asia-Pacific region and Conseco operating in the Middle East.

Key areas of business include buildings, building Services, land development and regeneration, traffic and transportation, highways and bridges, railways, environment and process technology, water and wastewater, power, fire engineering and IT and telecommunications.[2] In April 2015, Pell Frischmann received The Queen's Award for International Trade.[3]

History

The original Company was founded in 1926 by Cecil Pell who subsequently formed Pell Frischmann and Partners with Wilem Frischmann in 1972. The Group became a limited company in 1984. Until the late 1960s the Group's activities centred on Structural Engineering and Mechanical and Electrical Building Services.

Pell Frischmann Group has acquired a number of companies, including the Department for Transport's West Yorkshire Road Construction Sub-Unit (1981), 70 staff from the Infrastructure Directorate of the Milton Keynes Development Corporation joined the Group to form Pell Frischmann Milton Keynes Ltd (1988), Pell Frischmann Water Ltd was formed in 1990 as a joint venture between the Pell Frischmann Group and South West Water plc. EPD Consultants was acquired from Balfour Beatty (1998) and De Leuw Rothwell Ltd (2000) was a new company set up safeguarding the jobs of a number of staff following the collapse and subsequent liquidation of the former De Leuw Rothwell.

In 2002 the various offices were consolidated under one umbrella company and in September 2003 the company was restructured and changed its trading company name to Pell Frischmann Consulting Engineers (PFCE).

Major subsidiaries include Frischmann Prabhu founded by Sudhakar Prabhu and based in Mumbai providing expertise in the Asia-Pacific region and Conseco International which focuses on projects in the Middle East and was awarded the Queen's Award for Enterprise in 2006 for work in the reconstruction of Iraq.[4]

In October 2015, it was announced that RAG-Stiftung (Foundation) Investment Company had bought a majority in the company.[5]

Notable projects

Centre Point, London

Centre Point's facade

The 385 ft Centre Point tower was constructed between 1963 to 1966. It is a 32-storey office building above Tottenham Court Road tube station with 292,563 ft² of floor space. Pell Frischmann provided structural engineering design and construction supervision services. The external columns, load-bearing facade and floors are prefabricated off-site from concrete which was highly polished to give it the appearance of marble or granite. Centre Point achieved a record building time in the 1960s where a complete floor cycle was achieved in 7 days without the use of exterior scaffolding.[6]

United Kingdom

Tower 42 viewed from directly below
62 Buckingham Gate
Sheldon Square, Paddington Central
  • New Bodleian Library (ongoing 2013); Providing structural engineering services for the new structure.[10]
  • Earth Sciences Building (completed); A new teaching and research facility for the Earth Sciences Department designed by Wilkinson Eyre and partnered with Hoare Lea.[11] Pell Frischmann won the ACE Engineering Excllence award for Building Structures in 2011 for its work on the department.[12]
  • Blavatnik School of Government (ongoing 2013); Pell Frischmann is providing civil and structural engineering services for the new build structure. The building includes a 200 person capacity lecture theatre, teaching spaces, and seminar rooms.[13]
  • St Cross College (ongoing 2013), extensions to workspaces and accommodation. Pell Frischmann is providing structural engineering services while Hoare Lea are providing mechanical and electrical engineering.[14]

Middle East

References

  1. Withers, Iain (22 May 2013). "Former Ramboll boss joins Pell Frischmann". Building. Retrieved 2013-07-12.
  2. New Civil Engineer Consultants File, 2007
  3. http://www.pellfrischmann.com/index.php?page_id=292
  4. 1 2 "PELL FRISCHMANN CONSULTING ENGINEERS LTD". British Expertise. Retrieved 2013-07-12.
  5. http://www.pellfrischmann.com/index.php?page_id=310
  6. "Looking up: Midtown’s towering icon – Centre Point". GoToMidtown. 13 June 2013. Retrieved 2013-07-12.
  7. "Buildings - Offices". Pell Frischmann. Retrieved 2013-07-12.
  8. "62 Buckingham Gate, SW1". Land Securities. Retrieved 2013-07-16.
  9. "ACE Engineering Excellence Awards Shortlist announced". ACE. Retrieved 2013-07-16.
  10. "New Bodleian Library Refurbishment, Oxford, UK". Pell Frischmann. Retrieved 2013-07-12.
  11. "University of Oxford, Department of Earth Sciences. Oxford. UK". Laing O'Rourke. Retrieved 2013-07-12.
  12. "ACE Engineering Excellence Awards 2011 winners announced". ACE. 27 May 2011. Retrieved 2013-07-12.
  13. Hurst, Will (20 May 2013). "Revealed: Fly-through of Herzog's Oxford uni project". Building. Retrieved 2013-07-12.
  14. "ST CROSS COLLEGE" (PDF). 21 November 2012. Retrieved 2013-07-12.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, November 12, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.