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Good articleHochtief has been listed as one of the Social sciences and society good articles under the good article criteria. If you can improve it further, please do so. If it no longer meets these criteria, you can reassess it.
Did You Know Article milestones
DateProcessResult
February 18, 2006Peer reviewReviewed
February 18, 2006Good article nomineeListed
July 26, 2008Good article reassessmentKept
Did You Know A fact from this article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "Did you know?" column on February 20, 2006.
The text of the entry was: Did you know ...that Hochtief AG, the company that moved the Abu Simbel temple complex to save it from the Aswan High Dam, also built the Führerbunker, scene of Adolf Hitler's suicide?
Current status: Good article


Shouldn´t it be updated?

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Custodia sold its paticipation to ACS, which is now the main shareholder.--FAR 15:19, 29 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I've updated the figures, the corporate structure, the shareholders structure and the box. Unfortunately the HOCHTIEF's annual report doesn't give a figure like "revenue". As a construction company HOCHTIEF always speaks of their "work done", so I put that in the text and tried to put it in the box too. Tried, because somehow that change doesn't show up. Perhaps somebody could fix this? Please excuse if I made any mistakes, e.g. in referencing. I normally work in the German Wikipedia. --Wortschatz 07:30, 26 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Eugen Vögler / Albert Vögler

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Confusing the two brothers Eugen Vögler and Albert Vögler is quite a common disease.

  • Albert Vögler (1877−1945), CEO of the Vereinigte Stahlwerke AG (founded in 1926), former protegée of Hugo Stinnes, suicide on April 14th 1945 near his mansion at Wittbräuke (south of Dortmund)
  • Eugen Vögler (1883?−1956), CEO of Hochtief AG, lived at Essen, worked for Hochtief also after 1945

(see: Reichshandbuch der deutschen Gesellschaft, Part II, 1931) --217.254.2.246 22:38, 13 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

GA Reassessment

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This discussion is transcluded from Talk:Hochtief/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the reassessment.

GA Sweeps—kept

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This article has been reviewed as part of Wikipedia:WikiProject Good articles/Project quality task force. I believe the article currently meets the criteria and should remain listed as a Good article. The article history has been updated to reflect this review. Regards, Ruslik (talk) 10:50, 26 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

HOCHTIEF Company structure now is:

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The six divisions of Hochtief are:

Hochtief Americas (Turner Construction) Hochtief Asia Pacific (Leighton Holdings 55 Prozent) Hochtief Concessions Hochtief Europe Hochtief Real Estate Hochtief Services —Preceding unsigned comment added by 194.139.171.77 (talk) 09:34, 20 January 2010 (UTC)[reply]

New structure and new results

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I've updated the corporate structure (which is now down to four divisions) and added the latest financial results from the annual report 2010. Also I removed a sentence about ACS that had no source and was POV. In return I included some information about the takeover offer. I hope this is okay for everyboday. Wortschatz (talk) 08:34, 5 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Self introduction and question regarding outdated content

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Hello, We are the Corporate Press Department of Hochtief AG in Germany (Essen based). My name is Christian Gerhardus, I am the Head of Media Relations at Hochtief (please take a look at http://www.hochtief.com/hochtief_en/656.jhtml?c=cg). We have an official and testified account on Wikipedia Germany. Over the course of the last year we worked together with the administrators of the German Wikipedia site to update and improve the information given reg. Hochtief. We learned that advertising or "pr wording" are forbidden and stuck to the rules of Wikipedia. Together with the German admins we have achieved a good result.

We recognized that the information given on "Hochtief" in the English Wikipedia is quite outdated. Many things are wrong, others are missing. We would like to support anyone who wants to improve the text. For example we could deliver an English translation of the German Wikipedia text for your review.

As we know that the English Wikipedia differs from the German one we would like to be careful and avoid any type of mistakes or misunderstandings.

Please let us know how we could help to update and improve the text.

Thank you and kind regards, --Hochtief Konzernpressestelle (talk) 12:15, 19 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

I left some advice at your talk page, but as far as this article is concerned, can we start in a small way and identify text in the article which is wrong or outdated. WT:WikiProject Companies is the relevant wiki project, and someone there may be able to help. Also, the people who watch WP:COIN may have advice. I have added this page to my watchlist and may be able to do something minor, but I am busy elsewhere and this topic is outside my interest. Johnuniq (talk) 09:24, 21 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Translation of German Article

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Hi everybody, Unfortunately our official company account has been blocked for the English Wikipedia as a result of our self introduction above. That's a pitty as our attempt has been transparent and official, but we do understand and accept the rules. But please accept in reaction that we (as a company) don`t want to use some sort of "private" accounts (like this one) to do changes to the article on Hochtief. From our point of view this would be an "undercover operation" and we don`t want to work that way. On the other hand the article contains outdated information and needs to be updated. To support the English Wikipedia community to update the article on Hochtief we did a translation of the German article. Please find it below for your disposal. We hope this helps and please do not hesitate to aks us for clarification or further information. Kind regards, Christian Gerhardus

From here on: Translation of German Wikipedia Article

Extended content

Hochtief HOCHTIEF Aktiengesellschaft

Legal form Aktiengesellschaft ISIN DE0006070006 Founded 1873 Headquarters Essen, Germany Management • Marcelino Fernández Verdes, CEO • Thomas Eichelmann, Supervisory Board Chairman Employees 80,912 (2013)[1] Revenue € 25.693 billion (2013)[1] Profit € 171 million (2013)[1] Total assets € 14.757 billion (2013)[1] Industry Construction Website www.hochtief.de

Hochtief Aktiengesellschaft is a listed German construction group headquartered in Essen, Germany. Hochtief is one of the most international construction companies in the world[2], with 95% of total sales coming from operations outside Germany. In Australia, Hochtief is the market leader through its listed subsidiary, Leighton. In the USA, Hochtief is a leading commercial construction company via its subsidiary Turner. With Flatiron, the Group ranks as one of the most important players in the area of transportation infrastructure. Since 2011, the Spanish Grupo ACS has held a majority holding in the company.

Contents • 1 Products and services o 1.1 Urban and social infrastructure o 1.2 Energy infrastructure o 1.3 Transportation infrastructure o 1.4 Mining • 2 History o 2.1 Early years o 2.2 Hochtief under National Socialism o 2.3 Revival and recent history  2.3.1 1945 – 1966  2.3.2 1966 – 1989  2.3.3 1990 – 2007 o 2.4 Loss of independence o 2.5 Restructuring and realignment • 3 Organization o 3.1 Company structure o 3.2 Executive Board o 3.3 Supervisory Board members • 4 Construction projects (selected) • 5 Further reading • 6 Links • 7 References • 8 Notes

Products and services Hochtief carries out infrastructure projects around the world, some of which are part of concession arrangements and public-private partnerships. The company's core competence is construction. In 2013, the company no longer considered itself as a company providing services across the entire value chain of planning, financing, construction and operation. Instead it then concentrated on building transportation and energy infrastructure as well as social/urban infrastructure and mining.[3][4] In Australia, Hochtief is the market leader through its listed subsidiary, Leighton. Hochtief operates in the US commercial construction market via its subsidiary, Turner.

Urban and social infrastructure The company develops and builds neighborhoods and quarters, including residential properties and retirement properties with shops, offices, and leisure facilities. In addition, Hochtief builds pure-play office space, commercial, and industry properties, event facilities, shopping centers, and hotels.[5] Hochtief constructs and operates administration buildings, schools, universities, barracks and town halls, as part of public-private partnership programs in Europe, Canada, and the USA.[6][7]

Energy infrastructure Alongside the construction of power plants, geothermal and hydro-electric power plants, Hochtief provides construction services for offshore wind farms using jack-up vessels and jack-up rigs, including Thor, Innovation, and Vidar. Its responsibilities cover transporting and erecting the wind farms. Furthermore, the company plans offshore wind farms, constructs pumped-storage hydroelectricity plants and has established a subsidiary for constructing power lines.[6][8][9]

Transportation infrastructure Hochtief constructs bridges, railroads and train stations, airports and sea ports, roads, tunnels and highways both in Germany and internationally, in some cases as part of concession arrangements such as public-private partnerships.[6]

Mining Hochtief operates in the mining sector via the Leighton Group, the largest contract miner in the world. Contract mining means taking over and operating a mine on behalf of the mine's owner. This can include planning and establishing the mine, exploiting and transporting the raw materials, operating the mine including technical services for equipment, building required transportation as well as final dismantling and land restoration.[6]

History

Early years The company was founded in 1873 by the Kelsterbach-born brothers Philipp Helfmann (bricklayer) and Balthasar Helfmann (locksmith) in Frankfurt am Main as Gebrüder Helfmann.[10] Five years later in 1878, the Helfmann brothers obtained their first major contract, for the construction of the University of Giessen.[11] Shortly after the death of Balthasar, Philipp converted the company into a joint stock corporation Aktiengesellschaft für Hoch- und Tiefbauten ("Construction and Civil Engineering Corporation") in 1896. The company's headquarters were moved in 1922 to Essen.[12] The reason for this was a contract signed with Hugo Stinnes on February 10, 1921. Stinnes took a holding in Hochtief and was obligated in return to use only Hochtief for the construction projects of the Stinnes Group.[A 1] Following Stinnes' death in 1924 and the collapse of his industrial empire, Hochtief found itself in financial difficulties also. Hyperinflation also had a very negative on the construction sector. Hochtief shares owned by the Stinnes company were subsequently acquired by RWE and AEG.

Hochtief under National Socialism From 1933, Hochtief was also ensnared in the structures of National Socialism. The CEO Eugen Vögler, joined the NSDAP in 1937 and became Leader of the Construction Industry Business Group and Honorary Leader of the Hitler Youth. Hochtief itself expelled all Jews from the Supervisory Board and other positions of responsibility by 1935. As a construction company, Hochtief benefited from the economic recovery and extensive public works programs of the State. This initially included civilian properties such as expanding the Reichsautobahns, as well as the Congress Hall and the German stadium on the Nazi party rally grounds in Nuremberg. Starting in 1937, Hochtief worked on the construction of the Second Siegfried Line in a project managed by the Todt Organization and subsequently participated in the construction of the Führerbunker[13] and major military installations. From 1939/1940, the firm began to use more and more forced labor in its projects. The company states it has examined its history during the period of National Socialism self-critically and published it in a book in 2000.[14]

Revival and recent history

1945 – 1966 Following Germany's collapse in 1945, Hochtief suffered not only from the loss of its branches in East Germany, but also its international business. Work continued under the aegis of the new CEO, Artur Konrad. The Wirtschaftswunder (economic miracle) began with the reconstruction of Germany, which saw large benefits for the construction industry as a result of the widespread destruction. For Hochtief, the years following the currency reform in 1948 were its economic miracle. As early as the start of the 1950s, Hochtief had begun rebuilding its business outside Germany. Some of the first foreign contracts after the Second World War included a series of energy infrastructure projects in Turkey and bridges and smelting works in Egypt. From 1951 to 1952, Hochtief's first post-Second World War foreign project was the construction of the bridge over the Nile at Mansourah in Egypt. In 1952, construction began on the Sariyar hydroelectric power plant, and in 1953 on the Izmir power station. HOCHTIEF also took shares in a harbor-building company in Kandla, India in 1954. A high-profile success for the company was moving the Abu Simbel temples (November 1963 to September 1968) and the Temple of Kalabsha (1961 to 1963).[15] This UNESCO World Heritage Site had to be moved as a result of the construction of the Aswan High Dam.[16][17][18][19]

1966 – 1989 The focus of the company began to move away from pure-play construction towards more turnkey work and services, for example, the Hilton Hotel in Athens. However, up until the mid-1970s business outside Germany represented only a small part of operations. Most orders during this period were domestic, driven by Germany's economic boom, with a particular strength in building power stations. This included the construction of Kahl nuclear power plant, near Großwelzheim, a district of the Lower Franconian community of Karlstein am Main in Bavaria. The boiling water reactor nuclear power plant was the first commercial nuclear power plant in West Germany. The power plant was commissioned by RWE and Bayernwerk and constructed by Allgemeine Elektricitäts-Gesellschaft (AEG), with General Electric as the licensor and supplier for the boiling water reactor. The nuclear power plant went into operation on November 13, 1960 and began to feed electricity into the grid on June 17, 1961. At the same time, the company also undertook transportation infrastructure projects in the 1960s and 1970s, including the Raúl Uranga Subfluvial Tunnel in Argentina, the New Elbe Tunnel in Hamburg and the Bosporus Bridge in Istanbul. Following the 1973 oil crisis, the company benefited from the unexpected wealth of the oil exporting countries. Hochtief implemented what had been its largest contract with the turnkey construction of King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah, the largest airport in Saudi Arabia. As a result, work outside Germany accounted for more than 50% of Hochtief's business for the first time in 1980. Only by increasing domestic business did the company maintain stability. This was due to major projects completed in the 1980s.

1990 – 2007 Following German reunification, the company benefited from an upturn in construction. However, from 1993, it was exposed to increased competitive pressure as the economy weakened. At that time, the company, initially under Hans-Peter Keitel, then later Herbert Lütkestratkötter, introduced a new strategy. This covered all aspects of the value chain, including planning, financing, construction and service provision. Acquisitions were made accordingly, and new business activities were opened up. In order to handle these business activities, Hochtief established new businesses. • 1991 - Project development • 1996 - Facility management • 1997 - Airport management • 2002 - Infrastructure development and financing The company also expanded on the basis of international acquisitions: • 2000 - Turner Corporation, USA (100%) • 2001 - Leighton Holdings, Australia In 2004, Hochtief was converted from a subsidiary into a public company. With majority shareholder RWE selling its shares, Hochtief received a new international shareholder structure. At the end of the 2004 fiscal year, more than 80% of shares were in free float. In 2004, through the purchase of service companies Siemens Facility Management and Lufthansa Facility Management, the Hochtief Facility Management subsidiary increased in size from 800 employees to approximately 4,500 employees. In 2007, civil engineering company Flatiron, a leading provider for infrastructure projects in the USA, was acquired. The company also gained a foothold in the Gulf region with a number of years of representation in the Gulf States through the Habtoor Leighton Group, a Leighton subsidiary.

Loss of independence At the beginning of 2006, August von Finck acquired a 25.01% share via his company, Custodia Holding. In March 2007, the Spanish construction group Actividades de Construcción y Servicios (ACS) acquired Custodia's holding for EUR 72 per share. The transaction volume was EUR 1.264 billion. Subsequently, ACS acquired further shares and by September 2010, held 29.9% in Hochtief. On September 16, 2010, ACS announced a public takeover bid for the remaining shares, offering eight ACS shares for five Hochtief shares.[20] On November 29, ACS's takeover of Hochtief was approved by the BaFin (German Federal Financial Supervisory Authority).[21] In December, Qatar Holding, from the Emirate of Qatar, subscribed a reserved capital increase, thus acquiring a stake of almost 9.1%.[22] In January 2011, after ACS had raised its offer to nine shares for five Hochtief shares, ACS finally announced that it held a stake in Hochtief exceeding 30%, following the close of the takeover bid. [23] In June 2011, ACS held a total of just over 50% in Hochtief, since the voting rights of shares held by Hochtief itself were allocated to ACS.[24] In April 2011, CEO Lütkestratkötter announced his resignation at the end of the General Shareholders Meeting on May 12, 2011. His successor was Hochtief Executive Board member, Frank Stieler.[25] Stieler aligned the company's strategy with the focus on realizing energy and transportation infrastructure. These areas were defined as the core business of the company in 2013, alongside traditional construction. In November 2012, Stieler retired with immediate effect. His successor was Marcelino Fernández Verdes, who previously had been Chief Operating Officer at ACS. Supervisory Board Chairman Manfred Wennemer also stepped down from his position on December 31, 2012. His successor was Thomas Eichelmann, a member of the Supervisory Board up to that point.[26]

Restructuring and realignment In late February 2013, the Group, now under Spanish management, announced a change in its strategy: in future Hochtief would focus on the core competence of construction, and in particular the construction of major infrastructure projects. Business areas that were no longer part of core business would be sold.[27] As a result of this decision, Hochtief announced the sale of its Hochtief Airport subsidiary to Canadian infrastructure investor PSP Investments for approximately EUR 1.1 billion at the beginning of May 2013 and the sale of its Service Solutions division, in which the company's facility and energy management activities were bundled, to French company Spie at the beginning of June 2013.[28][29] In February 2014, the shareholding (50%) in the real estate company aurelis Real Estate, a former subsidiary of Deutsche Bahn, was sold to a consortium of investors led by the private equity company Grove.[30] This was followed by further sales of smaller business units.[31] At the same time, Hochtief began radical restructuring of its loss-making European activities: the Group spun off its construction business, previously bundled in one unit, into four largely autonomous companies and downsized up to 1,000 jobs, primarily in Germany.[27] [32] [33] [34]

Organization Company structure Hochtief Aktiengesellschaft is divided into three divisions with subsidiaries and other holdings[35]: Hochtief Aktiengesellschaft Hochtief Americas Hochtief Asia Pacific Hochtief Europe Turner Construction, Flatiron Leighton Holdings (58.77%) Hochtief Solutions

Executive Board • Marcelino Fernández Verdes, CEO • Peter Sassenfeld, CFO

Supervisory Board members Shareholders Employee representatives Thomas Eichelmann, CEO Gregor Asshoff Abdulla Abdulaziz Turki Al-Subaie Carsten Burckhardt Ángel García Altozano Thomas Krause Michael Frenzel Matthias Maurer José Luis del Valle Pérez Udo Paech Francisco Javier Garcia Sanz Nikolaos Paraskevopoulos Pedro López Jiménez Klaus Stümper Jan Martin Wicke Olaf Wendler

Construction projects (selected) Start of construction Completion Name City Country 1878 1879 University of Giessen Giessen Germany 1896 1897 Rosental Viaduct Friedberg Germany 1927 1932 Zollverein Colliery, Albert Vögler Shaft Essen Germany 1927 1928 Predigtstuhl Cable Car Bad Reichenhall Germany 1928 1929 Echelsbacher Bridge Between Rottenbuch and Bayersoien Germany 1929 1931 Schluchsee Dam Schluchsee Germany 1930 1934 Albert Canal Belgium 1938 1945 Participations in National Socialist period: Second Siegfried Line St. Wendel (construction segment) Germany 1938 1945 Participations in the National Socialist period: Atlantic Wall Fauske-Harvik (construction segment) Norway 1938 1945 Participations in the National Socialist period: Berghof Obersalzberg Germany 1938 1945 Participations in the National Socialist period: Wolfsschanze Gierłoż (Kętrzyn) Poland 1938 1945 Participations in the National Socialist period: Führerbunker Berlin Germany 1938 1945 Participations in the National Socialist period: Prora beach resort Binz Germany 1946 1949 Bonn University Hospital Bonn Germany 1952 1956 Sariyar Dam Turkey 1954 1964 Vianden Pumped Storage Plant Vianden Luxembourg 1958 1960 Jülich Nuclear Research Facility Jülich Germany 1961 1963 Hilton Hotel Athens Athens Greece 1963 1968 Relocation of the Abu Simbel temples Abu Simbel Egypt 1968 1972 Frankfurt am Main Airport Frankfurt am Main Germany 1969 1975 New Elbe Tunnel Hamburg Germany 1970 1973 Bosphorus Bridge Istanbul Turkey 1974 1981 King Abdulaziz International Airport Jeddah Saudi Arabia 1983 1988 Aalto Theater Essen Germany 1988 1991 Messeturm Frankfurt am Main Germany 1990 1992 Frédéric Chopin Airport (Terminal 1) Warsaw Poland 1994 1996 Commerzbank Tower Frankfurt am Main Germany 1996 2000 Athens International Airport Eleftherios Venizelos Athens Greece 1996 2000 Öresund Bridge Copenhagen/Malmö Denmark/Sweden 1998 2000 Kandinsky-Klee Master's House Dessau Germany 2001 Gotthard Base Tunnel Erstfeld/Bodio Switzerland 2002 2006 Ngqura Deepwater Port Port Elizabeth South Africa 2004 2006 WestendDuo Frankfurt am Main Germany 2005 2008 Dnipro Arena Dnipropetrovsk Ukraine 2005 2007 Gdańsk container terminal Gdańsk Poland 2006 2008 Kranhaus Mitte office tower Cologne Germany 2007 Elbe Philharmonic Hall Hamburg Germany 2007 2012 Subway line 4 (Hamburg) Hamburg Germany 2007 2009 Unilever-Haus (HafenCity) Hamburg Germany 2007 2011 Kaiserschleuse see lock Bremerhaven Germany 2008 2009 Modernization of the Fürst-Wrede Military Base Munich Germany 2008 2010 Hafenspitze Düsseldorf towers Düsseldorf Germany 2008 2010 A4 Federal Highway Eisenach/Waltershausen Germany 2009 2012 Berlin Ostkreuz railway station Berlin Germany 2010 2012 Lanxess Tower (during the conversion the building was referred to by the name maxCologne) Cologne Germany 2011 A8 Federal Highway Ulm/Augsburg Germany 2012 Global Tech I (offshore wind farm) EEZ in the North Sea Germany 2013 Berlin City Palace/Humboldt Forum Berlin Germany

Further reading • Manfred Pohl, Birgit Siekmann: HOCHTIEF und seine Geschichte, Piper Verlag, Munich 2000, ISBN 3-492-04270-8

Links • Commons: Hochtief – collection of images, videos and audio files • Hochtief website References 1. Hochtief: 2013 Annual Report. February 27, 2014, retrieved March 5, 2014 (PDF; 5.6 MB). 2. Engineering News Record: The Top 250 International Contractors. August 26, 2013, retrieved August 30, 2013. 3. Hochtief: HOCHTIEF to sustainably increase profitability, to reduce net debt, and to realign. Retrieved August 22, 2013 (PDF; 147 kB). 4. Hochtief: Towards the leading global infrastructure contractor with sustained profitable growth. Retrieved August 22, 2013 (PDF; 1.5 MB, English). 5. Hochtief: Strategy. Toward the future. With solutions from HOCHTIEF. Retrieved August 30, 2013. 6. Hochtief: Positioning and service range. Retrieved September 6, 2013. 7. Hochtief PPP Solutions: Company portrait. Retrieved September 3, 2013. 8. Global Tech I Offshore Wind GmbH: Vertrag mit Hochtief Construction über Errichtung des Windparks unterzeichnet. October 27, 2010, retrieved August 23, 2013 (PDF, 305 kB, German). 9. Hochtief: Quarterly Report January - March 2012. Retrieved September 6, 2013. 10. Manfred Pohl, Birgit Siekmann: Hochtief und seine Geschichte, Piper Verlag, Munich 2000, ISBN 3-492-04270-8, pages 19 et seq. 11. Manfred Pohl, Birgit Siekmann: Hochtief und seine Geschichte, Piper Verlag, Munich 2000, ISBN 3-492-04270-8, page 22. 12. Manfred Pohl, Birgit Siekmann: Hochtief und seine Geschichte, Piper Verlag, Munich 2000, ISBN 3-492-04270-8, page 92. 13. Berliner Unterwelten e.V.: Vorbunker und Führerbunker. From: "Vierzig Stufen unter der Stahlbetondecke – das blieb übrig: Zertrümmertes Waschbecken im bombensicheren ‚Führerbunker’", published in "Telegraph", November 25, 1947. Retrieved August 23, 2013 (HTML, German). 14. Hochtief: Verantwortung für die Unternehmensgeschichte im „Dritten Reich“. Retrieved August 22, 2013 (PDF; 57 kB, German). 15. Manfred Pohl, Birgit Siekmann: Hochtief und seine Geschichte, Piper Verlag, Munich 2000, ISBN 3-492-04270-8, page 267. 16. Die Zeit: Es ist spät für Abu Simbel. December 6, 1963, retrieved September 6, 2013. 17. Hochtief: Die Rettung von Abu Simbel. Retrieved August 23, 2013 (HTML, German). 18. Dirk Bitzer: Hochtief beim Tempelrücken. Retrieved August 23, 2013 (HTML, German). 19. Spencer, Terence (1966). The Race to Save Abu Simbel Is Won. Life, December 2, 1966. 20. Actividades de Construcción y Servicios, S.A.: Press release from ACS. September 16, 2010, retrieved August 23, 2013 (PDF; 19 kB, Spanish). 21. Michael Gassmann: Deutsche Bauindustrie greift BaFin an (German). In: Financial Times Deutschland, November 30, 2010. Archived from original on January 31, 2011. Retrieved January 16, 2014. 22. Frankfurter Rundschau: Katar wird Großaktionär bei Hochtief. December 6, 2010, retrieved August 23, 2013 (HTML, German). 23. manager magazin online: ACS ist am Ziel. ak/rtr/dpa-afx, January 4, 2011, retrieved August 22, 2013 (HTML, German). 24. Hochtief: Stimmrechtsanteil von ACS hat Schwelle von 50 Prozent überschritten - Veröffentlichung gemäß § 26 Abs. 1 WpHG. June 17, 2011, retrieved August 22, 2013 (PDF; 50 kB, German). 25. Hochtief: Dr. Herbert Lütkestratkötter scheidet zum 12. Mai 2011 aus dem Vorstand aus - Vorstandsmitglied Dr. Frank Stieler wird Nachfolger. April 10, 2011, retrieved August 22, 2013 (HTML, German). 26. Hochtief: Marcelino Fernández Verdes elected new CEO of Hochtief - Dr. Frank Stieler leaves the company. November 20, 2012, retrieved August 22, 2013 (HTML). 27. Hochtief: HOCHTIEF to sustainably increase profitability, to reduce net debt, and to realign. In: Hochtief press release, Hochtief Aktiengesellschaft, February 28, 2013. Retrieved March 18, 2014. 28. Hochtief: Hochtief sells airports business to Canadian pension fund manager. May 7, 2013, retrieved August 22, 2013 (HTML, German). 29. Hochtief: Hochtief sells Service business line to Spie. June 28, 2010, retrieved August 27, 2013. 30. Hochtief: Hochtief sells its stake in real estate company aurelis (PDF), Hochtief Aktiengesellschaft. February 3, 2014. Retrieved March 10, 2014. 31. Zeppelin: Zeppelin Konzern übernimmt Großteil der Hochtief-Tochter Streif Baulogistik (German). In: Zeppelin press release, Zeppelin, March 11, 2014. Retrieved March 18, 2014. 32. Hochtief: Good first half year for Hochtief, reorganization of Group proceeding to plan. In: Hochtief press release, Hochtief Aktiengesellschaft, August 14, 2013. Retrieved March 18, 2014. 33. Hochtief: HOCHTIEF takes another step to reorganize its European business. In: Hochtief Solutions press release, Hochtief Solutions AG, January 9, 2014. Retrieved March 18, 2014. 34. Michael Gassmann: Hochtief baut immer noch um (German). In: article in Die Welt, Die Welt, February 28, 2014. Retrieved March 18, 2014. 35. Hochtief: The Hochtief structure. Retrieved August 22, 2013 (HTML). Notes 1. A copy of the draft of the community of interests agreement can be found in "Manfred Pohl, Birgit Siekmann: HOCHTIEF und seine Geschichte, Piper Verlag, Munich 2000, ISBN 3-492-04270-8, pages 84 et seq.".

Kind regards, CG at Hochtief Corporate Press Department 09:03, 8 April 2014 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Christian Gerhardus at Hochtief (talkcontribs)

Hello Christian Gerhardus, thank you for translating the article. Please create a userspace draft and move the translation there; then make sure the formatting and in-line citations are corrected. The current translation is just one long plain text without any formatting, which isn't usable as an article. If you need help, please take a look at Wikipedia:Ask for help. I'm closing this COI edit request. Feel free to open a new COI edit request when the userspace draft, including the formatting, has been finished. --82.136.210.153 (talk) 19:19, 15 October 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Führerbunkerfensterputzer GmbH ?

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I believe "Führerbunkerfensterputzer" to be vandalism as it is an absurdity meaning "Fuhrer Bunker Window Cleaner" and the term does not exist in the reference cited at the end of that passage. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.119.205.88 (talk) 16:23, 19 May 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Removed as unsourced. – S. Rich (talk) 18:03, 10 September 2014 (UTC)[reply]
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