Carlo Salteri AC |
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Born |
Milan, Italy |
23 October 1920
Died | 12 October 2010 Sydney, Australia |
(aged 89)
Nationality | Australian |
Education | Politecnico di Milano, Milan |
Known for | Co-founder of Transfield; Founder of Tenix |
Spouse(s) | Renata Salteri (diss. 1981, dec'd 1991) Roslyn Cameron-Smith (m. 1986) |
Children | Paul, Mary, Adriana and Robert |
Carlo Salteri AC (23 October 1920, in Milan, Italy – 12 October 2010, in Sydney, Australia) was a prominent Australian businessman, mechanical engineer, founder of Tenix and co-founder of Transfield.
The eldest child of Giuseppe and Flavia Salteri, Carlo Salteri was raised in a well-heeled family in Milan. In 1940 he commenced an engineering degree at Politecnico before being called up by the Italian army a year later, where he served as a junior artillery officer. At the conclusion of World War II Salteri commenced work with Italian engineering company, Società Anonima Elettrificazione SpA (SAE), before the company was awarded a contract to build powerlines in Australia. Salteri was appointed in charge of the 25 workers travelling to Australia, together with Franco Belgiorno as his deputy. In 1951 Salteri migrated to Australia with his wife Renata and young family.
After working in Australia for five years with SAE, in 1956 both Salteri and Belgiorno-Nettis (as he later became known) jointly decided to leave SAE and form Transfield, in a partnership that lasted 40 years. The company focused on major engineering projects, such as bridges, tunnels, dams, hydro-electric and coal power stations, oil rigs, concert halls, sugar mills and power lines. Included in their list of major achievements are the construction of the Gateway Bridge in Brisbane and the Sydney Harbour Tunnel. By the early 1980s, Transfield had in excess of 3,000 employees and an annual turnover of A$350 million; and within five years grew to the point of being the biggest engineering firm in south-east Asia. The company acquired the Williamstown Dockyard in Melbourne and, in 1989 after winning a A$6 billion contract to build ten ANZAC class frigates for the Australian and New Zealand governments, the largest defence company in Australia. When visiting Australia in 1986 Pope John Paul II toured the Transfield factory located at Seven Hills.