The Razel-Bec exception is built on 130 years' experience in public construction works.
The Public Construction Works Division of the Fayat Group is the symbol of the union between two major families of entrepreneurs who helped to build 20th Century France, and post-war Africa.
Theses builders and pioneers contributed greatly to the construction of transport infrastructures - railroads and roads -, energy production facilities - hydro-electric plants, power plants - and other infrastructures linked to power supply and water treatment.
While the techniques have evolved, the company's mission remains the same: to improve transport through earthworks, tunnels and bridges. In addition, the company works on contracts for water purification plants and the construction/decommissioning of nuclear plants thanks to its civil engineering expertise. Examples of this are the work sites for the Le Havre water treatment plant, the vault of the Jules Horowitz nuclear reactor in Cadarache, and the design-production contract for the Activated Waste Treatment and Storage Facility (ICEDA) in the Bugey.
Razel-Bec employs 6,000 people. These men and women drive our operational and support units and thanks to them, we have been able to build a strong Public Construction Division.
History
In 1954, the company began working in Algeria and practically all West and Central African countries, essentially in French-speaking countries, but also Spanish-speaking (Equatorial Guinea) and English-speaking (Ghana). Razel-Bec recently developed its activities in Portuguese-speaking southern Africa, with the opening of a subsidiary in Angola and a branch in Mozambique.
Thanks to its broad-ranging expertise, Razel-Bec can provide its customers with a comprehensive, multi-trade service offer, notably in industrial civil engineering and water treatment, sectors with strong growth potential across the whole African continent over the coming decades.
The company's management structure in France and Africa enable it to meet these challenges; its innovation capacity and exportable technologies are major assets in international markets.