flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Swinerton rebrands to call attention to its broader portfolio

Contractors

Swinerton rebrands to call attention to its broader portfolio

Renewable energy is the kind of higher-margin business sector into which this GC has been expanding.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | May 27, 2018

In recent years, the general contractor Swinerton has become a major player in the construction, operation, and maintenance of solar power plants. Image: Swinerton

The general contractor Swinerton has rolled out a new brand identity that reflects the businesses it has added or evolved into over the past several years.

The San Francisco-based company, which is celebrating its 130th anniversary this year, is probably best known as Swinerton Builders, a brand it started using in 2001. But over the past six or seven years, the company has diversified in different directions.

In 2008, it launched Swinerton Renewable Energy, which has grown to become the largest builder of solar power plants in the U.S., with $1.5 billion in revenue last year, and the third-largest in the world.

Swinerton Renewable Energy has served the company as a platform for international growth. Over the past four years, it has built nine solar power plants in Canada, and a 750-MW solar power plant in Mexico.

Within its renewable energy unit, which is based in San Diego, Swinerton launched SOLV in 2012, a division focused on operating and maintaining solar utility plants. SOLV is now the largest company of its kind, managing more than 6 MW of power, and with 150 employees dedicated to that business. Last year, GTM Research and SOLICHAMBA identified SOLV the top service provider in the global operations and maintenance market for the second consecutive year.

Swinerton's new logo shows an architect and contractor pointing “outside the box,” which emphasizes the company's expanding into new businesses and markets. Image: Swinerton

 

Seeking better profit on work

Swinerton isn’t walking away from general contracting work; far from it. “We’re still a commercial GC at heart,” says Jeff Hoopes, a 34-year company vet who has been its CEO and Chairman since 2013. Under his leadership, Swinerton has expanded its reach beyond the western states by opening offices in Atlanta five years ago, Raleigh two years ago, and Charlotte last fall.

One of Swinerton’s larger current projects is Oceanwide Center, which it’s building in joint venture with the GC Webcor. When completed in 2021, Oceanwide’s two towers in San Francisco Transit Center district will include 265 residential units, a five-story-tall 26,000-sf public square, and a 169-key Waldorf Astoria hotel.

But it’s tough making money as a contractor, Hoopes laments. The industry averages only about 1% of a project’s revenue for contracting fees. “We’re looking at five times that” from the new businesses that Swinerton has moved into, Hoopes says.

So the company has been pulling away from government contracting projects, primarily because Congress has been inconsistent about funding them properly. Conversely, Swinerton is doing more co-investing with developer clients on projects like a 300-unit housing complex in Houston it recently worked on.

Hoopes says his company has also been transitioning into more self-perform work. It has 850 employees in California alone who do drywall. Swinerton designs and builds parking structures. And it wants to get into concrete pouring, and to either start up or purchase an electrical contractor. “We want to control more of every job,” says Hoopes.

Swinerton currently has around 2,000 “craft” workers in the field, along with 1,950 salaried employees, and 500-1,000 who work in the renewable energy business. When asked if, like many other GCs, his company has had trouble finding workers, Hoopes says that trades “want to work for a GC … because we’re employee owned, have good benefits, and offer career opportunities.”

Swinerton is 50% employee owned and 50% management owned. Its status as an ESOP is one of the reasons why Hoopes says he’s more concerned about growing Swinerton’s bottom line than he is about increasing its revenue, which nonetheless hit $4 billion last year and is projected to increase to $4.5 billion in 2018.

Swinerton is still committed to commercial building. One of its major projects is Oceanwide Center in San Francisco. Image: Swinerton

 

Still exploring new territories

To that end, Swinerton, with 15 offices and 11 practices, is looking at opening offices in New York and Chicago. It is also getting into the business of turning animal waste into energy. In July its plant on 42 acres in Warsaw, N.C., will be fully funded. That plant—which Swinerton owns in partnership with Carbon Cycle Energy—is set up to convert 4,200 tons of solid and liquid biodegradable materials per day to 6,500 dekatherms of biomethane gas. At full capacity, this plant will generate more than 1 billion cubic meters of pipeline-quality gas over the length of its 15-year contract with Duke Energy. That would be enough to power 32,000 houses.

Swinerton also has waste conversion plants in Phoenix and Missouri.

As part of its rebranding, Swinerton has made changes at its philanthropic arm, The Swinerton Foundation, which it started in 2002. The Foundation is transitioning from a private to a public nonprofit organization, and its new focus areas are equitable education, resilient communities, and workplace development.

Related Stories

| Jun 7, 2013

40 Under 40 retrospective: Where are they now?

Every month we’ll be catching up with past 40 Under 40 honorees to see what they’ve been up to since winning the award. This month we focus on a construction manager and a healthcare designer.

| Jun 7, 2013

First look: University of Utah's ‘teaching hospital for law’

The University of Utah broke ground on its cutting-edge College of Law building, which will facilitate new approaches to legal education based on more hands-on learning and skills training.

| Jun 7, 2013

First look: Austin breaks ground on 'light-filled' Central Library

The design scheme by Lake|Flato and Shepley Bulfinch incorporates reading "porches" and a light-filled, six-story atrium.

| Jun 5, 2013

USGBC: Free LEED certification for projects in new markets

In an effort to accelerate sustainable development around the world, the U.S. Green Building Council is offering free LEED certification to the first projects to certify in the 112 countries where LEED has yet to take root.

| Jun 4, 2013

SOM research project examines viability of timber-framed skyscraper

In a report released today, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill discussed the results of the Timber Tower Research Project: an examination of whether a viable 400-ft, 42-story building could be created with timber framing. The structural type could reduce the carbon footprint of tall buildings by up to 75%.

| Jun 4, 2013

Notification reinvented: SimplexGrinnell introduces revolutionary family of intelligent notification appliances

Simplex TrueAlert ES uses addressable technology to improve protection, simplify installation and reduce operating costs.

| Jun 3, 2013

6 residential projects named 'best in housing design' by AIA

The Via Verde mixed-use development in Bronx, N.Y., and a student housing complex in Seattle are among the winners of AIA's 2013 Housing Awards.

| Jun 3, 2013

Trifecta of awards recognize Vision/Rubenstein campus, Bayer Healthcare HQ

When Vision Equities, LLC and Rubenstein Partners purchased the 200-acre former Alcatel-Lucent campus in Whippany a little more than two years ago, the partnership recognized the property’s potential to serve as a benchmark infill revitalization for the State of New Jersey.

| May 31, 2013

Nation's first retrofitted zero-energy building opens in California

The new training facility for IBEW/NECA is the first commercial building retrofit designed to meet the U.S. Department of Energy’s requirements for a net-zero energy building.

| May 30, 2013

The Make It Right squabble: ‘How many trees did you plant today?’

A debate has been raging in the blogosphere over the last few months about an article in The New Republic, “If You Build It, They Might Not Come,” in which staff writer Lydia DePillis took Brad Pitt’s Make It Right Foundation to task for botching its effort to revitalize the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans.

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