Fulton Hogan
Fulton Hogan is a large, unlisted public civil engineering and construction company based in New Zealand and Australia. It was founded in 1933 in Dunedin by Julius Fulton and Robert Hogan. Today its main offices are in Christchurch, New Zealand, and Parkville, Victoria, Australia. The company serves New Zealand, Australia, and the Pacific Islands, and works on projects from asphalt and precast concrete to road, building, water and transport infrastructure, and project management.
Key leaders are Managing Director Nick Miller and Chairman Edwin G Johnson. Its products include asphalt and precast concrete.
In 2013, Fulton Hogan reported revenue of NZ$3.22 billion and an operating income of NZ$96.5 million, with more than 5,500 employees.
A brief history: after the 1920s push for state highways, Fulton Hogan grew from workers of the Neuchatel Asphalte Company who formed the new firm during the Depression. Hogan organized machinery, often bought or loaned from the Public Works Department, while Fulton oversaw the works. Growth slowed during World War II but surged afterward, with major road projects and plants like the Comalco Aluminium Smelter and the Roxburgh Hydroe plant. Today the company operates across New Zealand and much of Australasia, taking on jobs from residential driveways to dams and airport runways.
This page was last edited on 2 February 2026, at 20:37 (CET).