Katerra
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Construction |
Founded | 2015 |
Headquarters | Menlo Park, California,United States |
Key people | |
Revenue | Bankrupt (Under Liquidation)[1] |
Number of employees | 7,500 (2018)[2] |
Website | katerra |
Katerrawas an American technology-driven off-site construction company. It was founded in 2015 by Michael Marks, former CEO ofFlextronicsand formerTeslainterim CEO, along with Fritz Wolff, the executive chairman of The Wolff Co.[3]Katerra was listed on LinkedIn's "Top Startup Companies" to work for in 2017.[4]
In May 2020, it was announced that as a part of an additional $200 million raise, COO and formerSchlumbergerCEOPaal Kibsgaardwould take over from Michael Marks as CEO of Katerra in June. Some of its independent assets in other regions, including the Middle East would continue to exist as independent entity.[5]In June 2021, Katerra announced plans to shut down, laying off remaining employees without paying out earned personal time off or severance.[6]
Operations
[edit]The company was founded in 2015. In January 2018, Katerra took an $835 million investment fromSoftbank.[2]The investment was made from the Vision Fund.[3]
The company manufactured large building components off-site, particularly for multi-family housing. For example, the company would fabricate an entire wall (including windows) off-site for final assembly on site at a construction project. The technique allowed lower cost and the company claimed higher-quality finishes.[2]
Katerra was known for its use ofmass timberconstruction and its manufacture of mass timber products such asglued laminated timberandcross-laminated timber.[7][8]In support of this specialty, Katerra purchasedMGAin 2018, the leading architectural firm in the field of tall wood buildings and mass timber construction.[9]In many of its projects, the company served as an off-site manufacturer, architect, and on-site contractor.[10]It generally contracted directly with owners.[11]
The company had projects ongoing in several states; as of the end of 2018 it had 700 projects underway and many in backlog.[2]It had plans to build up to 14 distribution centers across the country.[12]
In December 2019, Katerra reported the company plans tolay offapproximately 200 of the workforce and close their factory inPhoenix, Arizona.The manufacturing was moved toTracy, California,where the costs were lower and the factory was highly automated.[13]
In June 2021 Katerra filed for bankruptcy, blaming theCOVID-19 pandemicas well as an inability to raise new capital following the collapse of its lender,Greensill Capital.[14]Softbank's Vision Fund had reportedly invested more than $2 billion in Katerra in total, including a bailout in December 2020.[15]
See also
[edit]WeWork– American coworking provider with similar investments from SoftBank
References
[edit]- ^[dead link]Dead link
- ^abcdCarson, Biz."SoftBank Leads $865M Investment In Katerra, Which Aims To Upend The Construction Industry".Forbes.Retrieved20 March2018.
- ^abKolodny, Lora (24 January 2018)."SoftBank pours $865 million into Katerra, a start-up making buildings in a factory".CNBC.Retrieved20 March2018.
- ^Roth, Daniel (November 1, 2017)."LinkedIn Top Companies | Startups: The 50 industry disruptors you need to know now".LinkedIn.
- ^"Paal Kibsgaard named CEO".May 2020.
- ^"SoftBank-Backed Katerra to Shut Down".The Information.Retrieved2021-06-01.
- ^"Katerra plans major US factory expansion".Retrieved20 March2018.
- ^Esler, Bill (19 March 2018)."Mass timber construction okayed for Washington State building codes".Woodworking Network.Retrieved20 March2018.
- ^Kitai, David (30 May 2018)."A Silicon Valley Company Just Bought One of Vancouver's Most Esteemed Architecture Firms".Vancouver Magazine.Retrieved31 May2018.
- ^"Katerra to build giant new CLT factory in Spokane, Washington".Treehugger.Retrieved20 March2018.
- ^"Construction tech, offsite startup Katerra raises $130M".Retrieved20 March2018.
- ^"Your Next Big Competitor? Get to Know Katerra".
- ^Joyner, Sean (2019-12-13)."Modular construction startup Katerra cuts 200 jobs to embrace automation".Archinect.Retrieved2020-01-08.
- ^"After Katerra: How digital construction is developing in the US".Global Construction Review.2022-05-18.Retrieved2022-06-07.
- ^Kruppa, Miles; Massoudi, Arash (2021-06-07)."SoftBank-backed Katerra files for bankruptcy".Financial Times.