Grocon
Grocon Pty Ltd, or more commonly Grocon, is Australia's largest privately owned development, construction and funds management company. With its head office located in Melbourne, Victoria, the company also has offices in Sydney and Brisbane. Over the past twenty years, Grocon has delivered four of Australia's five tallest buildings. Three generations of the Grollo family have been involved in managing the company.
Grocon has an extensive history of industrial disputes in Australia, particularly with the CFMEU including on-going litigation.
History
Grocon grew from a small family concreting business established in Victoria, by Luigi Grollo after he emigrated from Treviso in Italy in 1928. A one-man operation, Luigi Grollo set up his own business in 1948 and completed small concreting projects, such as paving, shopping centre car parks, sewerage infrastructure and swimming pools. His sons Rino and Bruno Grollo joined the business at the age of 15. The business expanded rapidly in the 1950s by continuing with concreting of municipal swimming pools and petrol stations in Melbourne. In the years following, the Grollo Group would transition from the building of local community assets throughout the 1960s to constructing landmark developments.In the 1970s, Grocon moved into concrete construction, such as shopping centres and high-rise buildings and started developing the projects themselves. It was also during the 1970s that Luigi Grollo handed the company over to his two sons and the business continued to rapidly expand. In 1975, Grocon moved to Darwin for 18 months after winning a large contract for rebuilding after Cyclone Tracy. This contract involved the construction of 400 houses for the government. Following this, the Grollo Group went on to develop buildings and operate businesses in a wide cross-section of industries, including commercial, residential, industrial, education, retail, sporting and tourism.
In the 1980s, many developments owned by the Grollo family were sold.
This included the selling of such assets as The Hyatt, Shell Corner, 200 Queen Street and a suite of shopping centres. At this stage, the Grollo family only retained one major development – the Rialto Towers.
In 2000, the construction business was split between a construction-centric business owned by Bruno and Daniel Grollo and a property development operation owned by Rino Grollo. As part of this shift, Rino Grollo secured Equiset and the Grollo Group. In 1999, Bruno’s oldest son, Daniel, assumed control of Grocon as chief executive officer. Daniel Grollo has since been appointed chairman of the Green Building Council of Australia. and the Prime Minister's Business Advisory Council.
In March 2012 the construction business was split again into a construction business, owned by Daniel Grollo, which is the current Grocon, and a property development business owned by his older siblings Adam and Leeanna. In 2014, Grocon achieved another milestone, being named as the “preferred developer” for the 2018 Commonwealth Games Village on the Gold Coast, Queensland.
On 24 February 2014, Deputy Chief Executive Officer Carolyn Viney succeeded Daniel Grollo as Chief Executive Officer of Grocon. Daniel assumed the role of Executive Chairman whilst retaining full oversight and ownership of the business.
UBS Grocon Real Estate
In December 2013, Grocon launched a five-year, $10 billion joint venture with Swiss investment bank UBS. The joint venture has created UBS Grocon Real Estate, a full-service real estate and asset management platform which has first right of refusal for Grocon's 2 billion development pipeline. The venture is chaired by John A. Fraser, Chairman and CEO Global Asset Management at UBS AG and Daniel Grollo will act as a Non-Executive Director.Awards and accolades
As a company, Grocon has been the recipient of numerous awards. In 2010, Grocon was named the Forest Stewardship Council Developer of the Year. and Grocon was also the National Master Builders Association Builder of the Year in 2011. Grocon received two The National Association of Women in Construction awards in 2013 for both outstanding and young achievement. In 2011, Grocon was the recipient of the ANZ–BRW Excellence in Community Practices prize. In the realm of safety, Grocon won the 2008 Safe Work Australia Best workplace health and safety management system award and received the WorkSafe Victoria OHS Management System of the Year prize.Industrial disputes
Since 2002, Grocon has been involved in conflict the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union over the CFMEU's rights at Grocon developments including occupational health and safety management, union access and the wearing of union badges. This culminated in the CFMEU's picketing of at least one entrance to the Emporium development which resulted in an impassable physical barrier, preventing access to the site through that entrance for Grocon workers. Grocon subsequently launched a 10.5 million compensation claim in the Supreme Court of Victoria for the blockade. It also sought contempt orders against the union for allegedly breaching two Supreme Court injunctions that ordered an end to the blockade. Justice Cavanough held that free access to the site for Grocon workers was prevented by the CFMEU as access could only be obtained through 'elaborate' police assistance. The Fair Work Building and Construction has subsequently also launched legal proceedings against the CFMEU.In June, 2015 a court ordered judgement was made which saw the CFMEU ordered to pay Grocon $3.5 million in damage.
Swanston Street wall incident
On 28 March 2013, during wind gusts of up to, a brick wall on the boundary of a Grocon development collapsed killing three people. The wall's safety, the role of the billboards Grocon had attached to the structure and the self-supporting nature of the structure designed by the previous owner were initially questioned as possible causes. The billboard extended one metre above the wall and was suggested to have acted as a sail. There was early speculation as to the role of the advertising hoarding and whether a permit had been granted or whether a permit was needed. There were also questions surrounding the role of tree roots in destabilising the wall. An unidentified spokesperson for the Victorian Government asked unions not to block productivity over the case. WorkSafe Victoria filed criminal charges against Grocon and Aussie Signs who were employed by Grocon to construct the billboard. Police acting in the case have stated that Grocon representatives refused to give evidence, and the company did not release an engineering report the court has asked for access to, saying it "was not relevant".In November 2014 Grocon was fined $250,000 in the Magistrates Court by Magistrate Charlie Rozencwajg after it pleaded guilty to a "single workplace safety charge" "... relating to the risk posed by the wall, rather than causing it to fall down.".
Alleged sabotage
Grocon experienced two fires on separate Victorian construction sites, and various other acts of suspected sabotage in June 2014.Completed projects
Grocon has built four of Australia's five tallest buildings in Melbourne, Sydney and South-east Queensland. Since, Grocon has increased operations abroad in India and the United Arab Emirates.Melbourne
In Melbourne, Grocon's completed developments include:- 101 Collins Street – skyscraper completed in 1991
- 120 Collins Street – Art Deco skyscraper with a granite façade also completed in 1991
- ANZ World Headquarters
- AXA Centre - AXA Insurance Group's Melbourne offices and winner of the Property Council of Australia Victorian Award for Office Developments
- Crown Casino – Recipient of the Master Builders Association Award in 1998 and currently the largest casino in the southern hemisphere on the Southbank
- Elizabeth Street Common Ground – An eleven-storey, 131-room community housing initiative built at cost in conjunction with the Victorian Government and the Australian Government
- Eureka Tower – At the time of its construction, the world's tallest residential tower at and awarded the Urban Design Award in the Victorian Architecture Awards
- Grand Hyatt Melbourne
- KPMG House
- The Age Media House – The publication centre for The Age newspaper neighbouring Southern Cross railway station and Colliers Award recipient for Best Office Development.
- Melbourne Rectangular Stadium – 30,500 capacity soccer, rugby league and rugby union in the Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Precinct
- Melbourne Cricket Ground Northern Stand Redevelopment - Redevelopment for the 2006 Commonwealth Games
- Pixel Building – Using carbon-neutral Pixelcrete concrete, Australia's first carbon neutral office building Pixel was awarded the Best Sustainable Building Award from the Master Builders Association and received the Premier's Sustainability Award for the Built Environment
- Queen Victoria Village – 600 million urban village precinct surrounding Melbourne Central railway station which received the Australian Property Institute Property Development Award
- Shell House – Shell's Australian headquarters and awarded a Property Council of Australia certification
- Rialto Towers – twin tower complex and the second tallest concrete building in the Southern Hemisphere
- SECV Project
- Telstra Centre
- WTC Wharf
- VCCC
New South Wales
- 1 Bligh Street – Six Star-rated office and winner of the Best Tall Building Award in Asia & Australasia for 2012 in the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat's Skyscraper Awards
- ANZ Bank Centre – office tower and Sydney headquarters for ANZ, Herbert Smith Freehills and Boston Consulting Group; winner of the Master Builders Association Safety Award
- Common Ground – Equity housing development in both Sydney and Brisbane and Urban Design Institute of Australia Award for Affordable Development winner
- Governor Phillip Tower – complex in Sydney's prestigious north-eastern precinct and Property Council of Australia National Award winner
- Horizon Apartments – apartment complex in Darlinghurst
- General Post Office – a development of an historic precinct surrounding the General Post Office in Sydney
- The Peak Apartments – apartment complex in Haymarket
- World Tower – skyscraper in Sydney, briefly Australia's tallest residential building and recipient of the 2004 Bronze Emporis Skyscraper Award
Queensland
- 480 Queen Street – Six Star-rated office complex, anchored by BHP Billiton and Herbert Smith Freehills in the Brisbane CBD
- The Oracle – 850 million development at Broadbeach
- Soul – An Australian Institute of Building National Professional Excellence Building and Cbus High Rise Award recipient, the residential tower completed on the Gold Coast's waterfront in 2012
- Parklands - 2018 Commonwealth Games Athletes Village, 550 million development featuring 1,252 dwellings with a mix of apartments and townhouses, a 5,840m2 retail precinct, green and landscaped spaces built around a 'Village Heart'. Strategically located on prime real estate within the Gold Coast Health and Knowledge Precinct, three kilometres from Southport CBD and five kilometres from Surfers Paradise.
Northern Territory
Leo Hammond architect of Melbourne designed them.
International
Internationally, Grocon's developments include:- Almas Tower – a skyscraper in Dubai – the tallest building in Dubai at the time of completion
- Burj Khalifa – an assisting contractor for the tallest man-made structure in the world, the office, hotel and observation tower
- Elite Residence - a AED1 billion project in the Dubai Marina
- Princess Tower – a tower in Dubai
- Rose Tower – located in Dubai, the world's tallest hotel until 2012
Ongoing projects
Australia
Grocon's current projects in Australia include:- 2018 Commonwealth Games Village – Grocon was selected in 2013 as the preferred developer for the Games Village
- 150 Collins Street – Westpac's corporate headquarters
- Australian Taxation Office Box Hill Headquarters
- Australian Taxation Office Brisbane Headquarters
- Emporium Melbourne – a new retail space neighbouring Melbourne Central railway station
- Legion House – Six Star zero-carbon refurbishment
- Victorian Comprehensive Cancer Centre – a 1 billion public-private partnership with the Victorian Government to build a cancer treatment precinct in Parkville, due to be completed in 2015
- The Ribbon - This 700 million redevelopment in the heart of Darling Harbour will create a spectacular waterfront experience, providing enhanced ground level activation, improved sightlines over the Harbour and pedestrian links across Cockle Bay and from the Harbour through to Darling Quarter.
- Northumberland - Designed by award-winning architectural firm, John Wardle Architects, The Northumberland development will include a twelve level office building and a companion five level office building with a ground floor café for building occupants, visitors and the local community to enjoy. The development is designed with a particular focus on environmental and social sustainability.
- Greenwich Fairfield - Greenwich, located in, Melbourne is an 40 million medium-density residential development comprising 77 apartments through a mix of one, two and three bedroom apartments along with retail offerings that will activate the street frontage.
- Twenty95 Manly - This development will comprise 24 sophisticated and stylish one two and three bedroom apartments over four stories, as well as commercial and retail spaces that will reactivate the street frontages for the first time in many decades. Twenty95 will reinvigorate Sydney Road, providing future residents not just a home, but an enviable beachside lifestyle.
International
- Etihad Towers – a complex of five towers in Abu Dhabi
- Central Market Project - Designed by Foster + Partners, a three tower complex in Abu Dhabi
- Pentominium – a all-residential development; one of the tallest of its kind in the world
- World One – residential complex in Mumbai which will be the tallest residential complex on the subcontinent