flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

NELSON joins forces with Cope Linder and KA

Architects

NELSON joins forces with Cope Linder and KA

More growth ahead, as NELSON expects to double its workforce and revenue this year.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | June 2, 2017

The 773,000-sf W and Element Hotel, which is scheduled to open in Philadelphia in 2018, will be one of the first projects completed under the combined company formed by the merger of NELSON with Cope Linder Architects. NELSON has also merged with KA Architecture, which with Cope Linder will form a core-and-shell practice within the firm. Image: Cope Linder Architects

NELSON, the Philadelphia-based interior design firm celebrating its 40th anniversary this year, has merged with two other firms, Cope Linder Architects and KA Architecture, to position itself as a full-service architectural and design outfit across multiple nonresidential building types.

The combinations became effective on June 1.

Founded in 1977, NELSON has steadily expanded for more than 15 years, primarily through acquisitions. In the past two years alone, it bought EHS Design and Marvin Stein Associates in Seattle, AAI in San Jose, and VeenendaalCave in Atlanta.

John “Ozzie” Nelson, Jr., NELSON’s Chairman and CEO, tells BD+C that his company’s marriages with Cope Linder and KA are the first of a series of mergers that NELSON plans to announce this year. Nelson says his company in 2017 would double its revenue to around $200 million and its workforce to “north of 1,200” from 625 at the start of the year. 

Nelson and Ian Cope, AIA, LEED AP, Principal with Cope Linder Architects, had been talking, on and off, for 27 months about bringing their respective companies together. Cope says his firm had also been approached by two other suitors—including a Canada-based engineering firm—which it ultimately rebuked, he says, because it feared it might lose its identity with clients “who are concerned about all of this massive absorption of AEC firms” going on in the industry.

The addition of 50-year-old Cope Linder, also based in Philadelphia, makes NELSON that city’s third-largest studio, with more than 125 employees there. Cope Linder is best known for its work in the commercial, hospitality, gaming, and entertainment sectors. One of the first projects to be completed under the combined company will be the 51-story, 773,000-sf W and Element Hotel in Philadelphia, which opens next year.

Craig Wasserman, RA, Executive Vice President at KA Architecture, says his firm has been predominantly a core and shell builder and planner. It has tried to diversity on its own, “but it never worked out,” he explains. The merger with NELSON, on the other hand, “is the perfect compliment,” and allows KA to go to market as a full-service firm. “We’ve been telling our clients about this merger, and their reaction has been fantastic,” says Wasserman.

Cleveland-based KA Architecture—which was founded in 1960 and, prior to the merger, was into its third generation of ownership—has lent its design services to, among other projects, retail centers, mixed-used developments, and hospitality. Its merger with KA represents Nelson’s third location in the Midwest. The 1.3-million-sf Liberty Center in San Francisco will be the first major project completed under the new brand KA Architecture, A Nelson brand. (KA is the Executive Architect on this project.)

KA and Cope Linder are also forming a core-and-shell practice within NELSON, says Wasserman. Nelson states the combinations place NELSON more competitively into the high-rise architecture market.

The mergers also allow NELSON to launch a newly formed Hospitality Practice, and to beef up its Retail Practice.

Merging for the right reasons

Diversification is certainly one of the drivers behind NELSON’s acquisitive streak.  For example, it is close to announcing another acquisition of a firm in New York that surveys and inspects buildings. Under Title 11, buildings over six stories high are required to be surveyed every five years. The firm NELSON would acquire already handles 800 of the 14,500 buildings in New York that fall under that regulation.

NELSON also runs a $13 million MEP engineering firm under a separate brand. But Nelson has never been a believer in combining architecture with other disciplines, such as engineering or building surveying, under one roof. He thinks the better solution to integrate vertically is to create holding companies to run those businesses separately, as it will the core-and-shell entity.

“Culture trumps everything else” when it comes to merging companies, says Nelson, speaking from experience. “It’s important for companies to look at the complete nature of coming together, and to be realistic.” He observes that, too often, smaller firms want to merge with larger firms just to take advantage of their marketing and sales clout without giving enough thought to how such a move might impact their employees and customers.

Nelson confirms that the managements of Cope Linder and KA are remaining with the company. He says NELSON looks for acquisition partners whose managements want to stay on with the combined firm.

When asked why so much AEC consolidation seems to be happening all of a sudden, Nelson says that relationships between firms and their clients don’t matter as much as they used to. “Everything has become a beauty competition,” and size, he says, has become a more important criterion to be considered for certain projects.

In the future, he says that NELSON will be looking to strengthen its position in Texas and the Washington, D.C. market.

Tags

Related Stories

| Jan 27, 2014

A climber's dream: Rock climbing hall planned near Iran's highest peak

Forget the rock climbing wall. A developer in Iran is building a rock climbing hall. That's right, an entire building dedicated to the sport, with more than 48,000 sf of program space. 

| Jan 24, 2014

First look: Foster + Partners' new home for Yale School of Management [slideshow]

Edward P. Evans Hall, the new home of the Yale School of Management, has opened for business. The 242,000-sf facility was designed by Foster + Partners, with Gruzen Samton as architect of record. 

| Jan 24, 2014

Reed Expansion Index predicts widespread economic improvement for the year

Reed's December Expansion Index stood at 1.48, indicating overall construction in the United States is expected to grow over the next 12 months.

| Jan 24, 2014

Urban Land Institute, Enterprise outline issues in rental housing shortage: Report

Bending the Cost Curve: Solutions to Expand the Supply of Affordable Rentals outlines factors that impede the development of affordable rental housing – causing the supply in many markets to fall far short of the demand.

| Jan 24, 2014

ZGF announces formal partnership with Vancouver's Cotter Architects

ZGF has announced the formal establishment of a Vancouver, British Columbia, presence in partnership with Cotter Architects.

| Jan 24, 2014

Structural concrete requirements under revision: ACI 318 standard

The American Concrete Institute (ACI), an organization whose mission is to develop and disseminate consensus-based knowledge on concrete and its uses, is finalizing a completely reorganized ACI 318-14: Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete.

| Jan 23, 2014

SMPS Announces Call for Entries for 37th Annual Marketing Communications Awards Program

The Society for Marketing Professional Services (SMPS) is accepting entries for its 37th Annual Marketing Communications Awards (MCA) competition. The MCA program is the longest-standing, most prestigious awards program recognizing excellence in marketing communications by professional services firms in the design and building industry. The entry deadline is March 3, 2014. SMPS members and nonmembers are eligible to enter.

| Jan 23, 2014

Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill-designed Federation of Korean Industries tower opens in Seoul [slideshow]

The 50-story tower features a unique, angled building-integrated photovoltaic (BIPV) exterior designed to maximize the amount of energy collected.

| Jan 23, 2014

Think you can recognize a metal building from the outside?

What looks like brick, stucco or wood on the outside could actually be a metal building. Metal is no longer easily detectable. It’s gotten sneakier visually. And a great example of that is the Madison Square retail center in Norman, Okla.

| Jan 23, 2014

3 fatal flaws your architecture firm has right now

After visiting over 200 architecture firms, I was aghast that so many of them were committing these costly sins of mismanagement and miscommunication, without even realizing it. If I can stop even one more firm from shooting its own foot, then this is worth it.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021