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Company type | Private |
|---|---|
| Founded | August 4, 1924[1] |
| Founder | Carl Barton, Arnold Malow[1] |
| Headquarters | Southfield, Michigan |
Area served | United States, Canada |
Key people | Ben Maibach III (Chairman Emeritus)[2] Ryan Maibach (President + CEO)[2] |
| Services | Construction Management, Integrated Project Delivery, Self-Perform |
| Revenue | $4.4 billion (2025)[3] |
Number of employees | 3,500 (2024) [1] |
| Subsidiaries | LIFTbuild |
| Website | www |
Barton Malow is a construction company headquartered in Southfield, Michigan. Founded in 1924 in Detroit as the C.O. Barton Company, the firm provides construction management, general contracting, design-build, program management, and self-perform construction services across both the United States and Canada.[1][4][5] The company has remained privately held and family-controlled throughout its history, with four generations of the Maibach family in leadership roles.[6] In 2024, Engineering News-Record ranked Barton Malow No. 19 on its annual "Top 400 Contractors" list, reporting $6.4 billion in domestic revenue.[7] In 2025, Barton Malow ranked No. 35 on Engineering News‑Record’s annual Top 400 Contractors list, a change ENR attributed to the completion of a $5 billion project that had significantly boosted the firm's prior‑year revenue.[8]
Barton Malow has a longstanding role in automotive and industrial construction, from Ford Motor Company and General Motors projects beginning in the 1960s to electric vehicle battery manufacturing facilities in the 2020s.[9] The company is also known for its work on sports venues — including the Pontiac Silverdome, Oriole Park at Camden Yards, and Soldier Field — and its development of LIFTbuild, a patented top-down construction technology that was the subject of a Harvard Business School case study in 2023. [9][2][10][11]
History
Founding and early years (1924–1949)
Carl Osborn Barton founded the C.O. Barton Company on August 4, 1924, in Detroit, Michigan.[1] The firm's initial work consisted of interior renovations for Michigan Bell Telephone Company.[2]
In 1927, Arnold Malow joined the company as vice president and treasurer and the firm was eventually renamed to Barton Malow Company.[1]
Postwar growth and reorganization (1949–1964)
Ben Maibach Jr., who had joined the company as a laborer in 1938 and worked his way through field management roles, eventually became a co-owner alongside Harold Butler.[12][13][14][15] By 1960, Maibach Jr. had become president of the company.[12]
In 1951, Barton Malow established a profit-sharing and pension plan for its employees, described as the first such plan by a U.S. contractor.[12]
By the early 1960s, Barton Malow was ranked among the 100 largest contractors in the United States by Architectural Forum, a nationally circulated Time Inc. trade publication, placing 35th in volume for general contractors and second in Michigan.[16][17]
Construction management and the Silverdome era (1964–1984)
In 1964, Barton Malow began construction of a 2.6-million-square-foot stamping plant in Woodhaven, Michigan, for Ford Motor Company. The project, built to support production of the Ford Mustang, employed fast-track construction methods in which construction began before design documents were fully complete — an approach the company later promoted as the construction management (CM) delivery method.[18][19][20]
In the early 1970s, Rollie Wilkening, then Barton Malow's executive vice president, served on construction management committees of the Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) and became a prominent advocate for CM, delivering a presentation titled "Prelude to Success or Is It Really For Me?" at the 1973 National AGC Convention in San Francisco.[18][20][21] In 1973, the Metropolitan Building Journal described Barton Malow as "the recognized forerunner in the Construction Management field."[20]
During this period, the company also completed construction of the Pontiac Silverdome (1973–1975), a stadium for the Detroit Lions featuring a 10-acre Teflon-coated fiberglass roof supported entirely by air pressure — among the earliest major athletic facilities to feature such a roof.[22][23] The $55.7 million project was completed in 23 months, on time and within budget.[22][24] The project cited by the National Society of Professional Engineers as one of the "10 Outstanding Engineering Achievements" of 1975.[25] The Silverdome's success led to subsequent dome stadium contracts, including the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis and the Georgia Dome in Atlanta.[26]
Barton Malow's relationship with General Motors dates to at least 1964, when Engineering News-Record named the firm as one of three Detroit contractors that performed the majority of GM's construction work.[27] That relationship expanded in the early 1980s when GM awarded Barton Malow construction management contracts for assembly plants in Orion Township, Michigan, and Wentzville, Missouri, each valued at approximately $400 million.[19] The firm also managed construction of the Detroit-Hamtramck Assembly Center, which carried a budget of $600 million and was described as one of the most complex auto assembly plants under construction in the United States.[28][29] By 1980, the company's annual contracts exceeded $1.15 billion, placing it 23rd among all U.S. contractors on the ENR Top 400 list.[30]
Ben Maibach III became president in 1981, continuing family leadership of the company.[2]
Sports venues and geographic expansion (1984–2010)
The company's sports construction portfolio expanded during this period. Other projects during this period included:
- Oriole Park at Camden Yards (completed 1992) — construction manager (as joint venture with Sverdrup) for the Baltimore Orioles' stadium, widely credited with establishing a new standard for retro-style urban ballparks.[26] [31] [32]
- Coors Field in Denver (Colorado Rockies)[33]
- Soldier Field renovation in Chicago (completed 2003) — a tri-venture project with Turner Construction, Barton Malow, and Kenny Construction (TBMK) for the Chicago Bears that involved constructing a new seating bowl within the existing historic colonnades.[34][35]
- PNC Park in Pittsburgh (Pittsburgh Pirates)[36]
- Paul Brown Stadium (now Paycor Stadium) in Cincinnati (Cincinnati Bengals)[37]
- Nationwide Arena in Columbus (Columbus Blue Jackets)[38]
- M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore (Baltimore Ravens)[39]
In other sectors, Barton Malow served as part of the joint venture for the Detroit Metropolitan Airport North Terminal Redevelopment.[40] The company also expanded its healthcare portfolio, serving as construction manager for the University of Virginia Replacement Hospital — at the time the largest state hospital construction program in Virginia history — and the Shriners Hospitals for Children Burns Unit in Boston, which required constructing a new facility above an occupied, in-use hospital and won the 2000 AGC Build America Award.[41] [42]
In 2001, the company moved into a self-designed and self-built headquarters in Southfield, Michigan, a $22 million facility that opened in November 2001.[43]
Recent history (2011–present)
Ryan Maibach, Ben III's son and a Purdue University construction management graduate who had joined the firm in 1997, was appointed president and CEO in 2011.[2]
The company entered the electric vehicle and battery manufacturing construction market, building lithium-ion battery plants for Ultium Cells (a then-General Motors–LG Energy Solution joint venture) in Lordstown, Ohio; Spring Hill, Tennessee; and Lansing, Michigan.[44][45] Barton Malow also served as construction manager for the Ford BlueOval SK Battery Park in Glendale, Kentucky, a 1,500-acre campus.[46][47]
Barton Malow's higher education and healthcare work has also continued. The firm served as construction manager for the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University, designed by Zaha Hadid, which was named ENR Midwest Overall Project of the Year in 2013.[48] More recently, the company is part of the tri-venture constructing the $2.2 billion Henry Ford Health Destination: Grand expansion in Detroit, a 20-story hospital tower that in 2025 marked the worldwide first placement of W14x1000 steel columns in a healthcare facility.[49]
The firm is also the general contractor for Hudson's Detroit, the largest ground-up development in Detroit in over 50 years. [50][51]
The company has also expanded its delivery methods to include design-build and Integrated Project Delivery; Building Design + Construction has ranked Barton Malow the top IPD construction firm in the United States in its Giants 400 report each year from 2022 through 2025.[52]
As of 2024, the company reported more than 3,300 employees with offices across nine U.S. states and two Canadian provinces.
LIFTbuild
LIFTbuild, a wholly owned subsidiary of Barton Malow, developed a top-down construction method for high-rise buildings. The technology, which drew on four years of research and development and 15 patents, assembles building floors at ground level and then lifts them into place along structural concrete cores using a jacking system.[53][54]
The proof-of-concept project, the Exchange building in Detroit's Greektown neighborhood, broke ground in September 2021. Sources report varying figures for the Exchange building; as‑built documentation and trade coverage describe the 16‑story tower as approximately 166,000 square feet with 153 rental apartments and 12 condominiums, while contemporaneous news reporting cited a larger overall floor area and higher condominium count.[53][54][55] The project marked the first top‑down high‑rise building constructed in the United States since the 1970s, according to Engineering News‑Record.[53] The final floorplate was lifted in January 2023.[56] The $64.6 million project was described by its developers as the first residential development in Greektown in approximately 60 years.[56]
Proponents argue the method improves worker safety by eliminating much work at height and enables better quality control through an enclosed, climate-controlled work environment. The Exchange project was completed approximately 8% ahead of schedule, and the development team has projected potential timeline reductions of 20–30% on future projects as the process matures. [53] [56]
In June 2023, Harvard Business School published a case study titled "Barton Malow: Building From the Top-Down," examining the company's efforts to commercialize LIFTbuild and the challenges of innovating within a traditionally slow-to-change industry.[10]
Industry involvement and recognition
Barton Malow has been a long-standing member of the Associated General Contractors of America (AGC). Ben Maibach Jr. served as president of the AGC Detroit Chapter, as did his son Ben Maibach III in 1986, while executive vice president Rollie Wilkening held a chapter leadership role in the 1970s.[20][57]
The company has received multiple AGC Build America Awards, including for the Shriners Hospitals for Children in Boston (2000)[58], University of Michigan Stadium (2011)[59], Daytona International Speedway (2017 Grand Award)[60], the Notre Dame Campus Crossroads project (2019)[61], and BlueOval SK Battery Park (2026)[62]. Outside the construction industry, Barton Malow has been named to Newsweek's Most Trustworthy Companies in America list (compiled by Statista).
References
- ^ a b c d e f "Barton Malow Officially Marks 100 Years in Construction". Michigan Contractor & Builder (Press release). October 2024. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ a b c d e f Ahrens, Ronald (2024-04-09). "Build to Suit". DBusiness Magazine. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "ENR's Top 400 Contractors Proceed With Caution Amid Intensifying Market Challenges | Engineering News-Record". www.enr.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ Caulfield, John (2024-07-30). "Barton Malow is celebrating its 100th anniversary with a road show". Building Design + Construction. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "Building Today for a Better Tomorrow Since 1924". Engineering News-Record. September 2, 2024. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ Williams, Candice (2024-09-28). "Q&A: CEO Ryan Maibach on Barton Malow's construction legacy, Hudson's Detroit work and AI". The Detroit News. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "ENR's 2024 Top 400 Contractors: Firms Feel Pinch for Profitability". Engineering News-Record. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "ENR's Top 400 Contractors Proceed With Caution Amid Intensifying Market Challenges | Engineering News-Record". www.enr.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ a b Williams, Candice (2024-09-29). "Barton Malow builds on a century of constructing Metro Detroit icons". The Detroit News. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ a b "Barton Malow: Building From the Top-Down - Case". Faculty & Research. Harvard Business School. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "The Official Site of The Pittsburgh Pirates: Ballpark: PNC Park Overview". Pittsburgh Pirates. Archived from the original on 2007-02-04. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ a b c "Michigan Construction Leader Ben C. Maibach Jr. Is Dead at 91". Engineering News-Record. 2011-10-10. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ Moran, Kathy (1973-10-12). "How Ben Maibeck [sic] Rose to President" (PDF). The Redford Observer.
- ^ Moran, Kathy (1973-10-24). "Barton-Malow Chief Thought "The Top" Was Beyond Him". Observer Newspapers.
- ^ "Harold Butler Obituary (2006) - Bay City, MI". Bay City Times. Retrieved 2026-04-15 – via Legacy.com.
- ^ "The 1962 Forum Directory of the 100 Biggest Architects / Contractors / Clients". Architectural Forum. 1962. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ The 1962 Forum Directory of the 100 Biggest Architects / Contractors / Clients. Architectural Forum. 1962. Retrieved 2026-04-09.
- ^ a b "Former Barton Malow president dies". www.crainsdetroit.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ a b Vogel, Don (1981-04-19). "GM Construction Boosts Barton-Malow Business". The Oakland Press. Archived from the original on 2026-04-09. Retrieved 2026-04-15. Alt URL
- ^ a b c d "Barton Malow Exec Heads AGC Delegation To S.F. Convention". Metropolitan Building Journal. 1973-03-19. Retrieved 2026-04-09.
- ^ "Wilkening and Marzette Win Engineer of the Year Award". Michigan Contractor & Builder. 1974-02-19. Archived from the original on 2026-04-09. Retrieved 2026-04-15. Alt URL
- ^ a b "Building Case History: Pontiac Silverdome". Bethlehem Steel. 1976. Retrieved 2026-04-09.
- ^ "It's Up". The Building Tradesman. 1975-10-10. Archived from the original on 2026-04-09. Retrieved 2026-04-15. Alt URL
- ^ "Construction Management works: helps put the lid on cost of world's largest domed stadium". Engineering News-Record. 1976-08-19. Archived from the original on 2026-04-09. Retrieved 2026-04-15. Alt URL
- ^ "Silverdome still a great facility, but that probably won't save it". michiganbuildingtrades.org. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ a b Singletary, Michelle (1989-05-02). "Stadium Project Overseer Chosen". The Baltimore Sun. Archived from the original on 2026-04-09. Retrieved 2026-04-15. Alt URL
- ^ "GM Accelerates Building Program". Engineering News-Record. 1964-03-26. Archived from the original on 2026-04-09. Retrieved 2026-04-15. Alt URL
- ^ Jackson, Luther (1981-05-02). "GM Breaks Ground in Poletown; a "day of triumph" Young says". Detroit Free Press. Archived from the original on 2026-04-09. Retrieved 2026-04-15. Alt URL
- ^ "Barton-Malow General Contractors/Construction Managers Handling A Variety of Multi-Million Dollar Projects". Artemis International. II (1). 1983.
- ^ "The ENR 400". Engineering News-Record. 1981-04-16. Archived from the original on 2026-04-14. Retrieved 2026-04-15. Alt URL
- ^ "Oriole Park at Camden Yards | Maryland Stadium Authority". mdstad.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "Oriole Park at Camden Yards". ballparks.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "Coors Field". ballparks.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "Soldier Field Renovation Praised for Design, Environmental Efforts | Smart Cities Dive". www.smartcitiesdive.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "Brandenburg Razes Chicago's Historic Soldier Field : CEG". www.constructionequipmentguide.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "PNC Park Overview". Major League Baseball. Archived from the original on 2007-02-04. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "ARCHITECTS, CONTRACTORS AND SUBCONTRACTORS OF CURRENT BIG FIVE FACILITY PROJECTS". Sports Business Journal. 2000-07-24. Archived from the original on 2016-04-03. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "NATIONWIDE ARENA FACTS & FIGURES". Sports Business Journal. 2026-04-15. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "M&T Bank Stadium | Maryland Stadium Authority". mdstad.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "Interactive List: Largest Construction Projects". Crain's Detroit Business. 2007-01-22. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "A Historic Project for a Historic University". Construction Reports. Retrieved 2026-04-09.
- ^ "Patient, Caring Work at Children's Hospital". Engineering News-Record. 1994-11-07. Archived from the original on 2026-04-15. Retrieved 2026-04-15. Alt URL
- ^ "The Office that Barton Malow Built + Designed". CAM Magazine. 2002. Archived from the original on 2026-04-14. Retrieved 2026-04-15. Alt URL
- ^ "AOM Energy/Industrial Ultium Cells Battery Manufacturing Plant | Engineering News-Record". www.enr.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "US Energy Dept. Closes $2.5B Loan for Three GM EV Battery Plants | Engineering News-Record". www.enr.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "Sparking the Future: Ford's $5.8B Battery Plant Advances | Engineering News-Record". www.enr.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "Ford Picks Barton Malow, Gray to Build $5.8B EV Battery Plants in Ky. | 2022-02-17 | Engineering News-Record". www.enr.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "ENR Midwest Overall Project of the Year: The Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum | 2013-11-18 | ENR | Engineering News-Record". www.enr.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "World-Record ArcelorMittal Steel Column Erected at Detroit Hospital | Engineering News-Record". www.enr.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "Barton Malow tops out tower on $1.4B Detroit development | Construction Dive". www.constructiondive.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "Building on the Bones of J.L. Hudson's in Detroit | Engineering News-Record". www.enr.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ Staff, BD+C (2025-06-03). "Top 20 Integrated Project Delivery (IPD) Construction Firms for 2024". Building Design + Construction. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ a b c d "With Exchange, LIFTbuild Delivers First US Top-Down Project Since the '70s | 2022-10-26 | Engineering News-Record". www.enr.com. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ a b Reiner-Roth, Shane (2023-03-06). "LIFTbuild's turns construction sites into fabrication factories". The Architect’s Newspaper. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "Exchange Detroit". www.thorntontomasetti.com. 2023-01-01. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ a b c Williams, Candice. "Greektown housing development locks in final floorplate with LIFTbuild". The Detroit News. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
- ^ "Coming to Grips With Change". Constructor. February 1987. Archived from the original on 2026-04-09. Retrieved 2026-04-15. Alt URL
- ^ "AGC News & Bulletins - Press Release -- AGC Awards Contractors for Outstanding Projects". www.agc.org. Archived from the original on 2001-02-10. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
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- ^ "The 2019 JLT Build America Awards" (PDF). AGC. 2019. p. 5. Retrieved 2026-04-15.
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