Sir Frank William Lampl was Life President of Bovis Lend Lease, the leading global construction management company that he created from the British building firm Bovis during a 15-year period as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer.
Background
The son of a prominent Czechoslovakian lawyer, he spent his teenage years as a prisoner in the Theresienstadt ghetto and Auschwitz and Dachau Nazi concentration camps, and his first construction job was as a slave labourer on an underground camp in Kaufering auxiliary camp of Dachau.
Career
After World World War II, Frank Lampl resumed his studies in Brno(Brünn) and inherited property from his murdered family. But after the communist takeover he was denounced as a bourgeois undesirable and sentenced to imprisonment in the uranium mines of Jachymov. Frank Lampl benefited from a general amnesty on Joseph Stalin’s birthday and was released in 1953 on condition that he take up work in either mining or construction.
Having tired of mining he returned to construction.
They never returned and at the age of 42 Sir Frank began his career in construction again. He joined the British building firm Bovis in 1971 and by 1975 led Bovis’s first foray overseas enjoying particular success in the then booming Middle East.
Bovis had been a division of the diversified transport and shipping company P&O since 1974, and in 1985 Frank Lampl joined the P&O main board in his capacity as Chairman of Bovis Construction. Bovis became a name synonymous with the Big Bang building boom of London in the 1980s and the company’s introduction of United States construction management skills facilitated rapid completion of the most complicated projects.
The biggest was Canary Wharf with the tallest building in Europe.
At the same time Sir Frank realised that Bovis needed to diversify internationally if the company was to survive after the boom was over. Additionally Sir Frank set up an operation in his former home town Brno and Bovis participated in several major Czechoslovakian developments. And the Asian expansion of Bovis resulted in some notable wins, particularly the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, then the tallest building in the world.
In 1999 Sir Frank oversaw the successful sale of Bovis to the Australian retail real estate group Lend Lease and then announced his retirement at the start of the new Millennium.
However, he remained Life President of Bovis Lend Lease and travelled extensively to see Bovis projects around the world. He was knighted in the 1990 New Year’s Honours and was an ex-chancellor of Kingston University as well as a holder of numerous honorary degrees.