CB&I was founded in 1889 by Horace E. Horton in Chicago, Illinois, USA. While initially involved in bridge design and construction, CB&I turned its focus to bulk liquid storage in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, coinciding with the western expansion of railroads across the United States and the discovery of oil in the Southwest. CB&I quickly became known for design engineering and field construction of elevated water storage tanks, above-ground tanks for storage of petroleum and refined products, refinery process vessels and other steel plate structures. As such, CB&I supported the expansion of oil exploration outside the US, starting operations in South America in 1924, in Asia two years later and in the Middle East in 1939. According to one of the founder's heirs, "The old joke is that Chicago Bridge & Iron isn't in Chicago, doesn't build bridges and doesn't use iron." During World War II, CB&I was selected to build Landing Ship Tanks, which carried troops and supplies to American and Allied troops fighting in Europe and the Pacific theater. CB&I was chosen because of their reputation and skills, particularly welding. Since the coastal shipyards were busy building large vessels for the war effort, such as aircraft carriers, battleships, cruisers and destroyers, there was no alternative but to use the inland waterways and shipyards for the production of smaller ships. As a result of these and other wartime production activities, CB&I ranked 92nd among US corporations in the value of World War II military production contracts. CB&I has been involved in a number of changes during the past two decades. It was acquired by Praxair in 1996; Praxair kept a chemical subsidiary and spun off CB&I as a Dutch-incorporated company the next year. CB&I headquarters moved from Chicago to Houston, Texas in 2001 and then to the Hague, Netherlands when Texas enacted a franchise tax. Since 2000, it acquired a number of companies. In 2003 it bought John Brown Hydrocarbons, renaming it at first CB&I John Brown, and later CB&I UK Limited. In 2012, CB&I agreed to buy The Shaw Group for about US$3 billion, completing the acquisition in February 2013. The subsidiary that was formed as a result, CB&I Stone Webster—a result of The Shaw Group's earlier acquisition of Stone & Webster during its bankruptcy—was again sold, in January 2016, to Westinghouse Electric Co., for US$229M. In May 2018 the company was acquired by McDermott International for US$6 billion. McDermott struggled to integrate its acquisition of Chicago Bridge & Iron Co, and in January 2020 was facing bankruptcy. On January 21, 2020, McDermott announced that it had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
Corporate headquarters and leadership
Corporate headquarters were located in The Hague, Netherlands. The administrative headquarters were located in The Woodlands, Texas. In 2018 McDermott announced that it would sell the headquarters facility in The Woodlands to Howard Hughes Corporation.
Historic structures
The company built bridges and other works of historic importance, including some listed on the National Register of Historic Places. These works include :
Manning Water Tower, 620 3rd St., Manning, Iowa, NRHP-listed
McCrory Waterworks, junction of N. Fakes and W. Third, McCrory, Arkansas, NRHP-listed
Mill Race Bridge, Pheasant Rd. over Turkey River, West Union, Iowa, NRHP-listed
Monette Water Tower, SW. corner junction of AR 139 & Texie Ave., Monette, Arkansas, NRHP-listed
Otranto Bridge, 480th Ave. over Big Cedar River, St. Ansgar, Iowa, NRHP-listed
Tyronza Water Tower, NW of junction of Main St. and Oliver St., Tyronza, Arkansas, NRHP-listed
Water Street/Darden Road Bridge, Over St. Joseph River at Darden Rd., South Bend, Indiana, NRHP-listed
West Water Tower and Ground Storage Tank, 310 11th Ave., Orion, Illinois, NRHP-listed
CB&I, 2000-present
In late 2000, CB&I embarked on acquisitions that have expanded its services to the entire hydrocarbon industry: conceptual design, technology licensing; engineering and construction; final commissioning and technical services. The firm acquired Lummus Global from ABB on November 19, 2007, adding approximately 3,000 employees. CB&I acquired The Shaw Group in 2013, adding pipe, steel and module fabrication services and engineering and construction capabilities in the power generation industry—both fossil and nuclear construction.. In 2015, CB&I sold their Nuclear Construction division to Westinghouse Electric Company, a subsidiary of Toshiba, for $229 million. For 2017, revenue for CBI was $6.7 billion, down from the year before. As of July 2017, CB&I's global business groups were:
Technology: licensed process technologies, catalysts, specialized equipment and engineered products for use in petrochemical facilities, oil refineries and gas processing plants;
Engineering & Construction: engineering, procurement, fabrication and construction of major energy infrastructure facilities;
Fabrication Services: fabrication capabilities for piping, structural steel, module prefabrication and assembly, as well as storage tanks and vessels for the oil and gas, water and wastewater, mining and power generation industries
After being acquired by McDermott, CB&I's stock ceased being listed on the NYSE on May 11, 2018. Gary P. Luquette was the chairman of the combined company.
In November 2004, CB&I was awarded a contract by one of the world's largest suppliers of wind turbines to fabricate 150 tubular steel support towers for wind turbines that were installed in wind farms in the western United States. The towers support 1.5-megawatt wind turbines, which are the largest wind turbines assembled in the United States and the most widely sold and tested megawatt-class wind turbines in the world. In April 2012, CB&I was awarded a contract for a petrochemicals expansion project in Geismar, Louisiana, including the license and basic engineering for the ethylene technology. In 2012, CB&I Technology was awarded a contract by Indian Petrochemicals major, Reliance Industries to design to provide paraxylene technology for an aromatics complex in India. The complex is one of the largest of its kind, has capacity to make 2.2 million tonnes per year of Paraxylene. The complex was started up in April 2017. With the start-up of this complex, Reliance is now the 2nd largest world producer of Paraxylene.