HomeAround the provinceBird Construction wins $575 million in contracts across five projects

Bird Construction wins $575 million in contracts across five projects

Ontario Construction News staff writer

Toronto-based Bird Construction Inc. says it has won contracts for $575 million in total across five projects. The company says it was selected for civil and concrete work on two industrial projects in Alberta and Saskatchewan, a multi-year master service agreement in the petrochemical sector, an expansion of an existing multi-year task order in the nuclear sector in Ontario, and a long-term care project in BC.

In a statement on Monday, the company says it was awarded a civil and concrete package for works at Dow’s Path2Zero, which is a $6.5 billion project to invest in a net-zero petrochemical project in Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta.

The 2NationsBird joint venture has been awarded foundations and underground utilities work at SaskPower’s Aspen Power Station Project, which is a 370-megawatt power station project that will support renewable power generation and provide reliable power in Saskatchewan.

In addition, Bird’s maintenance, repair, and operations team was awarded a five-year master service agreement with an existing client, and a second year of a previously announced multi-year task order under the Port Hope Area Initiative Master Construction Contract by Canadian Nuclear Laboratories.

SASKPOWER
SaskPower’s Aspen Power Station project

The company says the award highlights its ability to lead and execute environmental remediation within the nuclear sector.

Bird president and CEO Teri McKibbon said in the news release: “We continue to grow our diverse portfolio with projects spanning multiple sectors, with healthy contributions from multi-year recurring revenue awards. Our proven track record in successfully delivering early works on major industrial projects strategically positions us to pursue full project life cycle opportunities.”

Mark Buckshon
Mark Buckshon
Mark Buckshon founded the precursor business behind Ontario Construction News in 1989. Earlier, he worked as a journalist and sub-editor, including a stint on the Bulawayo Chronicle in 1979-80, during the transition from Rhodesia to Zimbabwe.  He has lived in Ottawa since 1981. While most publishers achieve their role through a sales/business development career, Mark developed his business skills after succeeding as a journalist, and he continues to enjoy actively writing, editing and contributing to the publication. Mark can be reached at buckshon@ontarioconstructionnews.com
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