Officine Maccaferri SpA is an Italian, family-owned multinational company. The company is specialised in products and solutions for the construction industry. It is 100% owned by the Maccaferri family and has headquarters in Zola Predosa, Metropolitan City of Bologna, Italy. Maccaferri's solutions are used for: retaining structures, soil reinforcement, embankment stabilisation, river and canal hydraulic works, coastal protection, erosion control, rockfall mitigation, debris flows and avalanche protection. The company provides technical support to designers, contractors and end-users. Maccaferri is a global company with 70 subsidiaries, 30 production facilities and 3.300 employees.
History
The company name can be traced back to the 16th century, when Giovanni “Maccaferri” was registered with the blacksmiths guild. However, to join the guild a person had to be 20 years old. As Johannes was only 14 at the time, the Bologna Senate granted a dispensation and approved his membership on 28 June 1550. Over 300 years later, on the 3rd May 1879, the Chamber of Commerce in Zola Predosa, Italy, recorded the registration of the workshop of a certain Raffaele Maccaferri, head of the Maccaferri family at the time. This was based in Gesso, near Lavino. As a blacksmith, the company of Raffaele Maccaferri manufactured items such as gates, fences, columns, staircases and railings used in the churches, houses and businesses in the Bologna area. Of the two sons of Raffaele, the eldest, Angelo, guided the commercial growth of the business, whilst Luigi was the industrial specialist. He expanded the capacity and introduced technology for wire-drawing into the factory. Soon afterwards the “gabion” was re-invented using wire mesh. The company's first major project was in 1893 when Maccaferri's gabions were used to repair a breach in the weir at Casalecchio di Reno. The gabions were simple sack gabions, filled in-situ with rocks. The same Chamber of Commerce in Zola Predosa also records that the company changed its name to “Raffaele Maccaferri and Sons” in 1895. At the turn of the century, Maccaferri obtained exclusive rights to the patent for a new, box shaped gabion, designed by the Cremona engineer, Edigio Palvis. Due to its regular shape and dimensions, the box gabion proved more successful than sack gabions as used at the closure of the breach at Caselecchio di Reno at creating retaining structures and river training works which were becoming increasingly important. In the early 1900s, Maccaferri began industrialising the technology, and the first branch factories were built in Grenoble and Naples. Key structures built at this time included protection to the River Tiber in Rome in 1906 and alongside the River Arno in 1908 for the National Railway Company. The company's first sales catalogue was produced in 1906 and in 1907 the company became “Officine Maccaferri & Pisa”. During the First World War, the metal craftsmanship was paused, whilst wire production was used for the manufacture of barbed wire, bastions and other mesh products for military purposes. Between the wars, the General Manager, Alessandro Maccaferri recognised the need to reconfigure and expand the company further, with increasing ventures overseas. In 1926, Maccaferri's gabions were used for embankment protection at the Genale Dam, commissioned by the Somali Government. In 1944, during the Second World War the factory in Zola Predosa was destroyed by aerial bombardment. The company was restarted in 1946 under the guidance of Gaetano and Guglielmo Maccaferri, sharing the company leadership. In 1951, Maccaferri opened another factory in Bellizzi, building upon the sales successes of the prior years. The steel wire double twisted steel wire mesh was used in the manufacture of many different products for numerous applications. Galvanising the steel wire with zinc was a standard approach within the wire industry. In the 1950s and 1960s PVC coating was added to the wire to offer a longer design life, especially in more demanding applications. This new coating technology was useful when the was invented soon afterwards; a larger flatter gabion with a smaller mesh size, used for river erosion protection works. Maccaferri's products were used to reconstruct roads and river banks following the devastating floods in Florence in 1966. In the ‘70’s, the company opened new factories in Canada, USA and, Brazil. Until the early 1990s, the company only supplied solutions using products manufactured from the company’s double twist steel wire hexagonal mesh. Since the 2000s, the company has grown through acquisition and geographical expansion. Growth also included diversification and addition of products to the Maccaferri portfolio, including construction geosynthetics, rockfall protection and products for tunneling.
Key acquisitions
Key acquisitions have included:
2006: Linear Composites Ltd
2006: BMD Texteis Ltda
Corporate Structure
The company was incorporated as a joint stock company under the laws of the Republic of Italy on May 25, 1920 and is registered # 00795700152 with the Register of Companies of Bologna with registered office at Via J.F. Kennedy, 10, 40069, Zola Predosa, Italy. Maccaferri is part of "Gruppo Industriale Maccaferri". This group, governed by a holding company SECI S.p.A., includes diverse companies operating in food and agriculture, mechanical engineering, tobacco, energy, real estate and biotechnologies.