Workboats move adds up for Meercat

Meercat Workboats has this month moved from Portchester to new, purpose built premises in Hythe Marine Park, Southampton. Picture shows Managing Director Jason Coltman second left with staff

WORKBOATS: Meercat Workboats has moved to new purpose-built premises at Hythe Marine Park, Southampton. Picture shows Managing Director Jason Coltman second left with staff

Meercat Workboats has  moved from Portchester to new, purpose built premises in Hythe Marine Park, Southampton, UK.

To coincide with the move the company’s management team has been restructured, two new vessels have been delivered and one new order confirmed.

The new site is 1,600 sq m, has two 20-tonne gantry cranes, a machine shop, an electrical workshop, a hydraulic workshop, aluminium welding bays, steel fabrication bays, dedicated stores, offices and customer parking.  A sum of circa £500,000 has been invested in the move.

Late in September Meercat Workboats delivered two new build vessels: MC26 into the aquaculture sector and MC28 to a marine civil contractor.

Meercat Workboats has this month moved from Portchester to new, purpose built premises in Hythe Marine Park, Southampton.

HEAVY LIFT: Inside Meercat Workboats’ purpose built premises in Hythe Marine Park, Southampton.

The company has relocated in time to conclude two further builds: MC27 (a 14m workboat) and MC29 (a 15m workboat).

The team are also pursuing prospects for house boats, pontoons and barges both locally and further afield.

The newly restructured management team includes Jason Coltman, who has recently returned to the business fresh from a summer sabbatical.

As part of the re-structuring, three new roles have been created. Ric Haselhurst has taken on the role of production manager, Jim Mair the role of technical manager and Tim Baily the role of project manager.

All four are key stakeholders in the business and will be the principle drivers of the business moving forward. Meercat employs 16 people in total

Nicholas Warren, the CEO of Burgess Marine, the parent company of Meercat Workboats, said: “The move is exactly what the business needs.

“Meercat is a growing business and we need a dedicated site and a dedicated management team.

“I’ve complete confidence in Jason, Ric, Jim and Tim as they lead the business going forward. They really are masters of their own destiny.

“They’re key stakeholders in the newly restructured company and I firmly believe that they can grow the company effectively and independently.”

He added: “Burgess Marine is a business that’s been built by individuals that genuinely do care.

“The same care and attention goes into each and every Meercat and it’s that passion that gives me complete confidence in the new management team and the business.

“Across the group we’re investing in plant, equipment and accreditation and we see Southampton and the Solent as the focal point for all our key initiatives.”

Workboats

Jason Coltman said: “It’s great to be back in the boat building business and over time Ric, Jim, Tim and I, along with the entire team here at Meercat fully intend to develop the Meercat brand and product range to be the very best in the workboat business.

“We’re newly independent and entirely committed to building both the business and our own standalone reputation.

“We’ve proven this by succeeding in a hard-fought pan-European public tender for ABP’s new Southampton based workboat.

“This vessel, hull number MC30, will be a 15m boat and she’ll be built right here in Southampton and delivered to the port early in the New Year.”

He added: “Whilst we’re intent on building more traditional Meercats we’ve also got pontoons, tugs, barges, house boats, RIBs and landing craft on the near horizon and some very exciting core Meercat product develop to include hybrid propulsion for the aquaculture sector – watch this space!”

Exact financial details of the relocation were not disclosed.

Contact account director James Tourgout on 07827 806400 and james.tourgout@deepsouthmedia.co.uk for more details.