SP Plus Corporation
Formerly | Standard Parking Corporation |
---|---|
Company type | Private company (since 2024) Public company (2004-24) |
Industry | Parking |
Founded | 1929 (Standard), 1947 (APCOA) |
Fate | Acquired by Metropolis Technologies |
Headquarters | Aon Center Chicago, Illinois, United States |
Number of employees | 26,000 |
SP Plus Corporation is an American provider of parking facility management services. It is a provider of parking, baggage handling, ground transportation, facility maintenance, event logistics, and security services across the United States and Canada.[1] Until December 2013, it was known as Standard Parking Corporation.
The company employs more than 26,000 people to manage 4,200 parking facility locations, as well as parking and shuttle bus operations at 75 airports.[2]
History
[edit]Standard Parking began in 1929 in Chicago, Illinois, where it was operated by David and Benjamin Warshauer as a family owned and controlled business. The business operated under the corporate name of Standard Parking Corporation from 1981 until 1995, at which time it was reconstituted as a limited partnership named Standard Parking, L.P. March 1998, Standard Parking merged with APCOA, Inc., forming APCOA/Standard Parking, Inc.
In April 2003, APCOA/Standard Parking, Inc. changed its corporate name to Standard Parking Corporation.[2] In June 2004, Standard Parking completed its initial public offering, listing on the Nasdaq under the symbol STAN, and raising $54 million in gross proceeds from the offering.
In July 2009, Standard Parking acquired the assets of Gameday Management Group, which plans the operation of transportation and parking systems, primarily for major stadium and sporting events and whose Click and Park service offers traffic demand management and pre-paid parking services.[2] In October 2012, Standard Parking completed the acquisition of Central Parking,[3] effectively doubling the size of the company.[4]
In December 2013, the company rebranded to SP Plus Corporation[5] and changed its NASDAQ ticker symbol to SP.
In October 2023, a request was submitted to the FCC & SEC for Metropolis, an artificial intelligence company that uses computer vision to enable checkout-free payment experiences, to acquire SP Plus Corporation for $1.5 billion. [6][7]
In May 2024, Metropolis completed the take-private transaction of SP+ to own 100% of the company and integrate its nearly 20,000-person team to continue forward as a founder-led and founder-controlled, private company.[8] With the completion of the transaction, SP+ shares no longer trade on the Nasdaq Global Select Market. With this deal, Metropolis developed a new growth model – known as the growth buyout (GBO).[9]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Corporation, SP Plus (2019-07-24). "SP+ Awarded Comprehensive Parking Management and Transportation Master Services Agreement with Premier". GlobeNewswire News Room. Retrieved 2019-08-16.
- ^ a b c Standard Parking Corporation Completes Merger With Central Parking Corporation
- ^ Standard Parking Buys Central Parking for $135M in Cash, Stock
- ^ Standard Parking merger with Central Parking
- ^ Standard Parking Corporation Unveils New Brand Identity
- ^ "Parking platform Metropolis agrees to buy SP Plus for $1.5 billion". Reuters. 2023-10-05. Retrieved 2023-10-05.
- ^ "Metropolis Technologies, Inc. to Acquire SP Plus Corporation for $1.5 Billion". Los Angeles Times. October 6, 2023. Retrieved October 8, 2023.
- ^ Metropolis. "Metropolis Closes $1.8 Billion Financing and Completes Transformational Take-Private of SP Plus Corporation". www.prnewswire.com. Retrieved 2024-05-28.
- ^ "How AI is disrupting parking".
- COMPANY NEWS; APCOA AND STANDARD PARKING PLAN MERGER, New York Times, 1998.
- 10 Floors for Parking Planned On Top of a Chicago Church, New York Times, 1990.
- IPO Watch: The cost of going public. Red Herring, 2004.
- Standard Parking to merge with Apcoa.
- Funding Universe Company History: Holberg Industries, Inc.
- Cost of downtown parking 'skyrocketing'. Chicago Sun Times, 2008.
- Parking Heaven Archived 2012-10-26 at the Wayback Machine, Time Magazine, 2002
- Sweet spot won't last; Standard Parking's shares are on a tear, but stock's ascent may begin to idle[dead link], 2006
- Standard Parking 2009 Annual Report, 2010