鈥榃e have no dependency on Europe as a single market,鈥 chairman says
Norman Foster has played down the impact of the UK鈥檚 decision to leave the EU on the firm he founded nearly 50 years ago.
In his chairman鈥檚 statement accompanying Foster & Partners鈥 latest results, Foster indicated that he would have preferred to stay in the EU 鈥 but said the country鈥檚 biggest architect did not need Europe for work.
He said: 鈥淚 am frequently asked for my opinion about Brexit and how it might affect us.
鈥淲ithout canvassing a vote across our studio my personal opinion is that by virtue of our cosmopolitan culture, we would be inclusive. Having said that our works are truly global in their spread and we have no dependency on Europe as a single market 鈥 even though it is a major source of the materials and components for many of our projects.鈥
The company now employs close to 1,500 people 鈥 with 1,250 based at its London studio in Battersea which Foster calls 鈥渢he mothership鈥 鈥 meaning staff numbers have gone up a third in just two years.
Foster said 35% of its Battersea staff are from the UK with 40% from the EU 鈥 with Spanish nationals accounting for a quarter of its EU staff. The remainder come from outside the UK and EU with the company employing staff from 72 countries in total.
Revenue at the business climbed past the 拢250 million mark with turnover rising a quarter to 拢257 million in the year to April 2016. But underlying profits slipped from 拢51.7 million to 41 million.
More than 拢150 million of its revenue comes from the Middle East and North America with its work from mainland Europe accounting for just 7% of business.
Workloads in the UK, which includes its work at the new Crossrail station and roof garden at London鈥檚 Canary Wharf, slipped 13% to 拢24 million.
Foster鈥檚 has five main overseas offices, including Abu Dhabi, New York and Shanghai, with another office due to open in Dubai next January, and Foster added: 鈥淥ur global spread is the outcome of a conscious policy which we have built up over many years and which we will continue to nourish.鈥
The firm paid out 拢5.7 million in performance related pay last year while its increased staff numbers saw its wage bill jump 拢8 million to 拢73 million. The salary of the highest-paid director, who is not named but is thought to be Foster himself, more than halved to 拢758,000 from 拢1.9 million last time.
Foster鈥檚 said work had started on 55 of its projects in the past year including an art museum in Florida, a headquarters building for metal firm RMK in Russia and a new head office for news organisation Bloomberg in London.
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