Suvarna Garge (Editor)

MWH Global

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Type
  
Public

Owner
  
Stantec

Website
  
www.mwhglobal.com

Number of employees
  
7,000

MWH Global httpslh6googleusercontentcomjpYA8O7LRrsAAA

Industry
  
Consulting, engineering, construction, operations and finance

Key people
  
Alan Krause, President of MWH, now part of Stantec

Revenue
  
$1.3 Billion USD (2013)

Headquarters
  
Broomfield, Colorado, United States

Founded
  
1820, Pasadena, California, United States

Subsidiaries
  
MWH B.V., MWH New Zealand Limited

Profiles

Mwh global engineering consulting management and more


MWH Global Inc. is a global water and natural resources firm, providing technical engineering, construction services and consulting services. The firm has provided planning, design and construction management services for a wide range of water and natural resources projects around the world. The firm is headquartered in Broomfield, a suburb of the Denver metropolitan area in the State of Colorado of the United States with operations in 35 countries. As of May 2015, MWH Global had a global staff of approximately 7,000 employees, including builders, engineers, architects, geologists, operators, project managers, business consultants, scientists, technologists, and regulatory experts. MWH is listed as the 15th-largest employee-owned company in America.

Contents

Mwh global people projects and purpose


History

MWH Global is the unification of three major engineering firms: James M. Montgomery Consulting Engineers (JMM), Watson Hawksley, Ltd., and Harza Engineering Company. JMM was founded in Pasadena in 1945 by James M. Montgomery following his work on the design (1936) and commencement (1941) of the 100-million gallon per day F. E. Weymouth Memorial Water Softening and Filtration Plant at La Verne, California for the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California while with the firm Hoover and Montgomery. JMM merged with Watson Hawksley, Ltd., of High Wycombe, United Kingdom, in 1990, combining JMM's specialization in water and wastewater engineering with Watson Hawksley's international operation, to become the global firm of Montgomery Watson. In 2001, Montgomery Watson merged with Harza Engineering Company, of Chicago, Illinois, best known for its work in the energy and environmental sectors and hydroelectric power development including the El Cajón Dam in Honduras (officially known as Central Hidroeléctrica Francisco Morazán), and operated under the new name of Montgomery Watson Harza. In 2003, the firm name was shortened to MWH. In 2010, MWH acquired Biwater Services Ltd., a water construction and engineering firm. With the acquisition, the firm’s history can now be traced to 1820, when Ames Crosta Babcock (an acquisition of Biwater Services) was created. In 2016, MWH was aqcuired by Stantec Consulting Inc.

References

MWH Global Wikipedia