Los Angeles Times

Constructi­on magnate dies

STEPHEN BECHTEL JR., 1925 - 2021

- Bloomberg

Billionair­e Stephen Bechtel Jr. led global firm for 30 years.

Stephen Bechtel Jr., the third-generation heir of the Bechtel Corp. constructi­on empire who led its global drive for 30 years and provided President Reagan with key Cabinet members, has died at his home in San Francisco.

The company said Bechtel died Monday at 95. No cause of death was given.

The Stanford-educated engineer became a billionair­e while leading the San Francisco-based firm’s expansion through megaprojec­ts in Saudi Arabia, the U.S. and Canada.

He took over as president from his father in 1960, when he was 35, and oversaw contracts for the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in north San Diego County, the Jubail Industrial City in Saudi Arabia and the James Bay hydroelect­ric project in Canada. In less than two decades, he doubled the company’s size, according to its website.

“As a manager, Steve Bechtel Jr. differed greatly from his father,” the company said in an online profile. “Steve Jr. was in every sense the first profession­al manager to run the company. Steve Jr. had a grip on the numbers and details of the business in a way that his father never had.”

His net worth was $3.5 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index. He and his son Riley were each believed to own 20% of the company, Forbes reported. Riley Bechtel succeeded his father as chief executive officer in 1990.

The grandson of company founder Warren Bechtel, Stephen Bechtel Jr. served on presidenti­al committees and councils while running the constructi­on firm that built Hoover Dam during the Great Depression and more than 500 cargo ships and U.S. Navy tankers during World War II. He advised Lyndon Johnson on urban housing, Richard Nixon on pollution control and productivi­ty, and Nixon and Gerald Ford on industry-labor relations.

Bechtel Corp.’s ties to government drew accusation­s of cronyism. Its partner in the wartime shipyards was steel executive John McCone, who later became CIA director under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson.

Two decades later, Bechtel alumni joined Reagan’s Cabinet when George Shultz, a Bechtel president, became secretary of State, and Caspar Weinberger Jr., Bechtel’s general counsel, was named Defense secretary. Public concern about the company’s influence was intensifie­d by the secrecy of its chairman.

“He had no patience with troublesom­e stockholde­rs or filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and even less for the prying scrutiny of the public and the press,” according to a 1988 Fortune story.

The company’s most well-known project during Bechtel’s tenure was the constructi­on of an industrial city in the Saudi fishing village of Jubail. The plan, which began in 1975 and cost more than $30 billion, created a center for more than 160 enterprise­s and housing for almost 90,000 full-time residents, according to the website of Jubail University College.

Before stepping down as chairman in 1990, Bechtel presided over the constructi­on of San Francisco’s Bay Area Rapid Transit System; the early stages of the Channel Tunnel project that linked Britain with France through a 31-mile undersea railway at a cost of $14.7 billion; and the James Bay Hydro Complex, a $13.8-billion project in Quebec that harnessed the energy of four rivers and helped fuel the province’s economy.

During his tenure, he also served in an advisory role at Caltech, Purdue, MIT and Stanford.

Stephen Davison Bechtel Jr. was born May 10, 1925, in Oakland to Stephen D. Bechtel Sr. and the former Laura Peart. He had a sister.

In 1943, Bechtel enrolled at the University of Colorado, as part of the Marine Corps Officer Cadet Unit. He transferre­d to Purdue University, where he earned a BS in engineerin­g. He received a master’s in business administra­tion from Stanford University in 1948.

Bechtel then joined the family business and worked on a pipeline project in Texas and on other constructi­on jobs around the U.S. and Canada. He became chairman in 1973.

In 1991, President George H.W. Bush awarded him the National Medal of Technology, the highest U.S. honor for technical achievemen­t. In 2009, the Boy Scouts of America announced plans for a national scouting center based in West Virginia after the S.D. Bechtel Jr. Foundation donated $50 million, the largest gift in the history of the Boy Scouts.

With his wife, the former Elizabeth Mead Hogan, whom he married in 1946, Bechtel had five children.

 ?? Bechtel Corp. ?? POWERFUL CEO Stephen Bechtel Jr. presided over massive constructi­on megaprojec­ts around the world.
Bechtel Corp. POWERFUL CEO Stephen Bechtel Jr. presided over massive constructi­on megaprojec­ts around the world.

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