Two groups to bid to build Teva's new head office

Teva
Teva

3,000 Teva employees will work in the NIS 1 billion Ra'anana complex when it is completed.

Two groups are emerging as the final competitors for building Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd.'s (NYSE: TEVA; TASE: TEVA) giant complex in Ra'anana. One is Minrav Holdings Ltd. (TASE: MNRV) and the other consists of Electra Ltd. (TASE: ELTR) and Tidhar, which submitted a joint bid, sources inform "Globes."

As reported seven months ago in "Globes," Teva, which for a long time has been considering concentrating all its headquarters activity in a single site, decided to buy land in Ra'anana and build its company headquarters there.

After holding talks with Carasso Real Estate and Isras Investment Co. (TASE: ISRS), which own land in Petah Tikva, and Toyota importer George Horesh, who owns land in the northern Ra'anana industrial zone, Teva chose Ra'anana. The cost of building the 40,000-50,000-sq.m. complex is estimated at NIS 1 billion.

The move is planned to save Teva $1 million annually in future costs on renting properties. The developer in projects of this scope is usually the state, not a business company. This difficult large-scale project should make a significant contribution to the work backlog of the winning company.

At the end of the third quarter, Electra's work backlog totaled NIS 9.5 billion, and Minrav's was NIS 4.1 billion at the end of 2014. It is believed that the profit margin on the project will be similar to the prevailing low profit margin in the sector: 6-8% gross profit and 3-5% net profit.

Beyond the expected addition to the work backlog and profit, the project will gain the winning group prestige, and quite a few companies have competed for it. The media previously reported that Teva had demanded that the competitors include a foreign architect in designing its site, and that Minrav had hired super-architect Daniel Libeskind, who designed the Ground Zero project in New York, among other things. It was reported that Electra and Tidhar had hired Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG), a Danish architectural firm.

The 44-dunam (11-acre) site of Teva's planned new headquarters lies between Dafna, Hatidhar, and Dolev Sts. Horesh bought the 55-dunam (13.75-acre) site from Comverse Inc. (Nasdaq: CNSI) in 2010 for NIS 106 million, and later sold 11 dunam (2.75 acres) of it to SAP for NIS 40 million. It is believed that Teva paid Horesh NIS 160 million for the site.

Teva's headquarters is currently located on Basel St. in Petah Tikva, and the company also has several other sites in the city in Daniv Park and the Kodak Building, as well as activity in Netanya. Teva's goal is to transfer all its activity to the Ra'anana site, including Teva's international business activity, its management offices, R&D, and its ethical drug laboratories (generic business will remain in nearby Kfar Saba). Teva also has Israeli sites in Ramat Hovav, Jerusalem, Shoham, and Ashdod, and will continue to operate there. When construction of its new complex is completed, Teva will have 3,000 employees working there.

In response to the report, Teva said, "Teva is currently considering a number of bids for building the Teva campus. As the company announced several months ago, the campus will include the company's global headquarters in Israel. The company will set up an Israeli construction firm that will cooperate with an architectural firm with international experience.

"The campus, construction of which will be completed in four years, will consolidate the global headquarters activity currently spread over a large number of sites. The campus will give Teva employees an advanced and comfortable environment that will encourage the scientific, technological, and business excellence to which the company is committed, in addition to preserving the heritage of Teva and its founders.

"When the winning bid is chosen, the company will issue an orderly announcement."

Published by Globes [online], Israel business news - www.globes-online.com - on January 17, 2016

© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd. 2016

Jerusalem court cmplex credit: Zarhy Architects Tenders issued for two huge Jerusalem construction projects

The PFI tenders for the Gan Hotzvim tech campus and the courts complex include grants of NIS 1.7 billion for the winning bidders.

Israel Innovation Authority CEO Dror Bin Innovation Authority chief: Israel top for deep tech investment

Dror Bin told the Globes TECH IL conference that deep tech is the next wave for global tech and the rate of investment in Israel is the world's highest.

Gil Shwed and Nadav Zafrir credit: Menash Cohen With new CEO Check Point beats analysts in Q1

Revenue rose 6.5% and GAAP net profit rose 5% in Nadav Zafrir's first full quarter at the helm.

Nadav Zafrir credit: Niv Kantor Check Point CEO: We'll reinvent cybersecurity for the AI age

In his first interview since succeeding Gil Shwed, Nadav Zafrir was speaking at the Globes TECH IL Conference.

Tel Aviv light rail credit: Yossi Cohen Rishon Lezion to finance Red Line light rail extension

The Rishon Lezion Municipality will pay for part of the extension by marketing land above the planned underground depot.

Intel Haifa development center credit: Shutterstock Intel to cut 20% of workforce - report

"Bloomberg" reports that new CEO Lip-Bu Tan will announce the layoffs this week.

Healthee team credit: Healthee PR AI healthcare costs management co Healthee raises $50m

Healthee’s benefits and care navigation platform empowers employees and employers to make the most of their health benefits.

Former Shufersal CEO Itzik Abercohen credit: Eyal Izhar Competition Authority summons former Shufersal CEO to hearing

According to the indictment, Shufersal and Itzik Abercohen allegedly made public statements through which he attempted to reach arrangements to raise prices.

Reco founders Ofer Klein, Gal Nakash, and Tal Shapira credit: Elegant Photographics Israeli SaaS security co Reco raises $25m

The Tel Aviv-based company has developed a comprehensive application discovery engine capable of identifying and classifying over 50,000 applications, and providing visibility into an organization’s SaaS ecosystem.

Tel Aviv Stock Exchange credit: Tali Bogdanovsky TASE outperforms global markets in 2025

Boosted by the strong results of Israel's banks, the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange has demonstrated impressive resilience to domestic and foreign upheavals.

Metro credit: Bar Lavi Can Hyundai fill Metro vacuum created by China's exclusion?

The South Korean giant is reportedly eager to enter Israel's infrastructure sector but may not have the resources to dig the Metro tunnels.

Hero 120SF loitering munition  credit: Uvision Israeli firms to arm Germany with suicide drones

UVision's partnership with Rheinmetall and IAI's partnership with MBDA will help equip the German Army with an arsenal of loitering munitions.

Cipia Vision Credit: Company website Cipia Vision lays off 50% of workforce

The financially troubled Israeli auto-tech company raised NIS 68 million on the TASE in 2021 at a company valuation of NIS 354 million.

Israir aircraft credit: Moni Shafir Israir gets green light for Tel Aviv - New York flights

The US Department of Transport has approved US-Israel flights for the Israeli carrier.

Mentee Robotics founders credit: Mentee Robotics Shashua's Mentee to begin production of humanoid robots

Exclusive: Amnon's Shashua's Mentee Robotics will begin serial production next month of robots for use in logistics centers.

Elbit mobile mortar shell launching system credit: Elbit Systems US military aid changes hit small Israeli defense firms

The reduction to zero for overseas procurement from US military aid and the cancelation of reciprocal procurement will hurt defense companies, which unlike IAI, Elbit and Rafael, do not have US subsidiaries.

Twitter Facebook Linkedin RSS Newsletters גלובס Israel Business Conference 2018