Skip to main content

Aximum gains strength in route safety systems

Aximum is a comparatively new organisation, but it incorporates many old-established companies in the route safety business. As Alan Peterson discovered, it is 'ready to pick up speed'. A few weeks ago the French-based Aximum Group added a fourth international subsidiary to its portfolio of businesses at the end of what has been a busy period for the fledgling company.
March 1, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
Christophe Mitridati

Aximum is a comparatively new organisation, but it incorporates many old-established companies in the route safety business. As Alan Peterson discovered, it is 'ready to pick up speed'

A few weeks ago the French-based 164 Aximum Group added a fourth international subsidiary to its portfolio of businesses at the end of what has been a busy period for the fledgling company. Al Habtoor Aximum is a joint venture with the leading contractor in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and with the backing of this highly regarded and powerful partner (40,000 employees), this new opening in Gulf and Middle Eastern countries gives Aximum access to huge infrastructure projects and, more generally, to a steady flow of business throughout the region. This move is in line with the group's ambitions and those of its chairman and managing director Christophe Mitridati.

"We already had three installations abroad: a subsidiary in the Netherlands specialising in the manufacture of road marking products (Veluvine); a more general subsidiary in the Czech Republic oriented towards works and services (Somaro CZ), and a similar subsidiary in Croatia (Signalinea)," he told 3260 World Highways.

The Aximum Group is the result of a merger in early 2009 of 20 companies (some of them 50 years old) covering a wide spectrum including the safety equipment and route safety sector, metal and concrete vehicle restraint systems, urban arrangements, road markings, vertical signalling, traffic lights, traffic networks and management, route management, safety posts and site management.
"This merger was necessary because of the complexity of our structure, which was a result of the many acquisitions made over several decades. We were already leaders in a large number of sectors, and this merger enabled us to become the European leader in route safety because our strategic scope is not limited to highways," said Mitridati.

"With the new name came a new organisation in France. I chose to make a clear distinction between works and services, split into six regional departments on the one hand, and industries on the other, forming three separate companies: Aximum Produits électroniques (electronics), Aximum Produits de marquage (marking), and Aximum Produits de sécurité (safety).

"Our customers greatly appreciated this clarification because it made the group's complex combination of products easier to distinguish with a single brand but several trade entities: it is unquestionably a winning solution."

Today, Aximum has a turnover of €340 million, 2,000 employees, ten factories, six design offices, four research laboratories, 120 sales outlets in France and four abroad. And we are proud to belong to the Colas group, among the world leaders in route building, which will guarantee long-term growth in our development strategy.

"Clearly, as in any business, the current global crisis has restricted, and continues to restrict, our expansion, but the outlook is good as our markets are solid and not affected by trends. In the French market in particular, which accounts for approximately 90% of our turnover, route safety has been a priority for the government since 2002, and efforts in this area are ongoing.

"The trend is the same in other countries as no government can be blind to the human drama caused by road accidents. Safe routes are still the best way to avoid accidents: vehicles have almost reached the maximum safety level (for example ABS, ESP and airbags) and drivers, despite checks and penalties, are still a human variable that is difficult to manage, control and anticipate."

Looking ahead, Mitridati said: "I have great confidence in the potential of this splendid group which I have reorganised and which now has a number of solid assets: 2,000 employees of a very high technical standard with a real entrepreneurial spirit; a powerful and very cooperative shareholder; a young and dynamic brand; clear, streamlined structures, and a sustainable, global market: route safety. Aximum is ready to pick up speed."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Wacker Neuson posts strong 2023 revenue
    March 27, 2024
    Despite a difficult second half of the year, group revenue rose again by 17.9% to €2,654.9 million.
  • STRABAG reports satisfactory financial performance
    February 22, 2016
    Construction firm STRABAG says that its performance in the 2015 financial year was ‘satisfactory’ and that its outlook for 2016 is positive. “We closed an overall satisfactory year in 2015 with a higher output volume on nearly unchanged employee levels and a lower order backlog. In 2016 we want to maintain the output volume at its high level and raise our EBIT margin to 3%. Thanks to our improved risk management and cost reductions, we are confident that we will reach this goal after having also succeeded i
  • Kirk Steudle Named 2018 IRF “Man of the Year”
    May 14, 2019
    Kirk Steudle, longtime Director of the Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) and a globally recognized authority on the development of connected and automated vehicles has been nominated to receive IRF's most distinguished individual honour. According to IRF Chairman Eng. Abdullah A. Al-Mogbel "This accolade crowns an exceptional career and a highly respected voice on innovation in transportation, at a time when road sector stakeholders everywhere are embracing creative thinking in anticipation of ne
  • Tunnels and bridges, improving Argentina's major road link
    May 2, 2012
    A road improvement plus tunnel and bridge building contract in an area once inhabited by dinosaurs in northern Argentina, is a small but key part of an ambitious project to complete a road that will eventually link the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Latin America - Adriana Potts reports. Remote, rough and spectacular are words that come to mind when describing the mountains of Ischigualasto in Argentina's northern province of San Juan This is the only place in the world where an undisturbed sequence of rock