Halifax Shipyard



The Halifax Shipyard Limited is a Canadian shipbuilding company located in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Founded in 1889, it is today a wholly owned subsidiary of Irving Shipbuilding Inc. and is that company's largest ship construction and repair facility.

Halifax Graving Dock Company 1889-1918
The Halifax Graving Dock Company was formed by English investors who constructed the graving dock for $1 million, opening on September 21, 1889 on the western shore of Halifax Harbour in the community of Richmond. The following year on August 22, 1890 the Halifax Graving Dock Company purchased the Chebucto Marine Railway Company Limited located in Dartmouth Cove, at the mouth of the former Shubenacadie Canal in Dartmouth. During World War I, the Halifax Graving Dock Company's facilities on the Halifax side of the harbour were badly damaged by the December 6, 1917 Halifax Explosion, which occurred 300 m north of the graving dock. The graving dock was quickly repaired and planning began to add building slips and plating shops for a modern ship yard to construct the first steel-hulled ships in Atlantic Canada.

Halifax Shipyards Limited 1918-1978
In 1918 the Halifax Graving Dock Company's assets were purchased by Montreal investors who organized them into the Halifax Shipyards Limited, completing the shipyard and beginning ship construction in the final stages of WW I. In 1920 Halifax Shipyards Limited was acquired by the conglomerate British Empire Steel Corporation (BESCO). In 1930 Halifax Shipyards Limited was acquired by the conglomerate Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation (DOSCO). During World War II, the company's facilities were critical to the war effort as Halifax Shipyards Limited constructed 4 Tribal class destroyers for the Royal Canadian Navy - the first all-Canadian built destroyers - and was vital in repairing more than 7,200 ships damaged in the Battle of the Atlantic.

From the early 1950s to the mid-1960s the shipyard won contracts with the Royal Canadian Navy to construct 4 destroyers as part of the RCN's post-war fleet modernization program. In 1957 Halifax Shipyards Limited was acquired by the conglomerate A.V. Roe Canada Ltd., which had purchased DOSCO and its subsidiary companies. In 1962 Halifax Shipyards Limited was acquired by the conglomerate Hawker Siddeley Canada which had purchased A.V. Roe Canada Ltd. and its subsidiary companies.

Under Hawker Siddeley ownership, the company began to diversify its contracts in the 1960s and 1970s, constructing ferries and other government contracts, as well as oil drilling rigs and drill ships for Atlantic Canada's nascent offshore oil and gas industry. Various repairs and smaller builds filled out the order sheet during this period.

Halifax Industries Limited 1978-1985
In 1978 the parent company Hawker Siddeley was placed in receivership and the shipyard's assets were held by the primary creditor, the Government of Nova Scotia. A consortium named Halifax Industries Limited was organized and reached an agreement with the provincial government to operate the shipyard. A modernization program began in 1979 with a $7.5 million mill upgrading as well as a replacement program for yard infrastructure. The floating dry dock Prins Hendrik Dok No. 4, built in Rotterdam in 1933 was purchased and rebuilt by the shipyard in 1979. It was renamed Scotiadock and complemented the existing graving dock for ship repair and construction. In 1983 a new Panamax floating dry dock was purchased, having been built in 1982 by Marine Industries Limited in Sorel, Quebec. It was named Novadock and gave the shipyard the ability to repair the largest-sized ships on the eastern seaboard.

Halifax-Dartmouth Industries Limited 1985-1994
In 1985 the shipyard declared bankruptcy and was purchased by a group of Nova Scotia investors who organized it as Halifax-Dartmouth Industries Limited (HDIL). In 1992, Quebec-based engineering firm SNC-Lavalin was the successful bidder for the Maritime Coastal Defence Vessel Project which would build what is today known as the Kingston class or the MCDV. SNC-Lavalin sub-contracted HDIL for the ship design and construction of the 12 vessels.

Halifax Shipyard Limited 1994 - Present
In 1994, mid-way through the MCDV project, the shipyard's owners sold HDIL to Irving Shipbuilding Inc. of Saint John, NB who renamed the yard Halifax Shipyard Limited. In 1998, the shipyard purchased a replacement floating dry dock for the Scotiadock. The floating dry dock General Georges P Vanier was built by Canadian Vickers Ltd. in 1964. Upon purchase by Irving Shipbuilding, the dry dock was renamed Scotia Dock II.

Like all Canadian shipyards, Halifax Shipyard Limited underwent a dramatic slowdown in new construction and refit business during the late 1990s and throughout the 2000s due to changes in Government of Canada tax and tariff policies for ship owners, as well as a reduction in federal government construction for warships, icebreakers, ferries and scientific vessels. On June 27, 2003 Irving Shipbuilding announced it had an agreement with the federal government to permanently close the country's largest shipyard, Saint John Shipbuilding in Saint John, NB. The competing Davie Yards Incorporated in Lauzon, QC experienced similar financial difficulty and spent much of the decade in mothball status. This left Halifax Shipyard Limited as the largest full-service shipyard left on Canada's Atlantic coast and the flagship facility for Irving Shipbuilding Inc.

A handful of new-build contracts for oil rig supply vessels, a cruise ship, as well as repair and maintenance contracts for Royal Canadian Navy warships and Canadian Coast Guard icebreakers and scientific vessels, public and privately owned ferries, commercial ships, and oil rigs has kept Halifax Shipyard Limited moderately busy in recent years.

In September 2009 Irving Shipbuilding was awarded a contract to build the Hero-class patrol vessel project for the Canadian Coast Guard. These 9 vessels are scheduled to be delivered by 2014-2015.

In October 2011 Irving Shipbuilding was deemed the successful proponent for constructing 23 warships for the Royal Canadian Navy under the $35 billion National Shipbuilding Procurement Strategy. This merit-based competition will see the federal government enter into an exclusive contract with Irving Shipbuilding to supply the vessels over the next 20 years.

Partial list of ships built

 * St. Laurent-class destroyer
 * HMCS Saguenay (DDH 206)
 * HMCS Margaree (DDH 230)


 * Restigouche-class destroyer
 * HMCS Chaudiere (DDE 235)


 * Annapolis-class destroyer
 * HMCS Annapolis (DDH 265)


 * Tribal-class destroyer
 * HMCS Micmac (R10)
 * HMCS Nootka (R96)
 * HMCS Cayuga (R04)
 * HMCS Athabaskan (R79)


 * Kingston-class coastal defence vessel:
 * HMCS Kingston (MM 700),
 * HMCS Glace Bay (MM 701),
 * HMCS Nanaimo (MM 702),
 * HMCS Edmonton (MM 703),
 * HMCS Shawinigan (MM 704),
 * HMCS Whitehorse (MM 705),
 * HMCS Yellowknife (MM 706),
 * HMCS Goose Bay (MM 707),
 * HMCS Moncton (MM 708),
 * HMCS Saskatoon (MM 709),
 * HMCS Brandon (MM 710),
 * HMCS Summerside (MM 711),


 * Ice Breakers
 * CCGS N.B. McLean,


 * Ferries:
 * MV Confederation, Canadian National Railway,
 * Petit Princess, Nova Scotia Dept. of Transport,
 * Cargo Steamships
 * SS Canadian Mariner,
 * SS Canadian Explorer,
 * SS Canadian Cruiser, refrigerated ship,
 * SS Canadian Constructor, refrigerated ship,


 * Cargo/Passenger Steamships
 * Bahia Aguirre,
 * Bahia Buen Suceso,
 * Bahia Thetis,


 * Cruise ships:
 * Pearl Mist,


 * Harbour Tugs
 * Sambro/Erg
 * Point Chebucto (Tug)


 * Anchor handling tug supply vessels:
 * Atlantic Eagle,
 * Atlantic Hawk,
 * Atlantic Kingfisher,
 * Atlantic Osprey,
 * Atlantic Condor,


 * Hero-class patrol vessels
 * CCGS Private Robertson V.C.,
 * CCGS Caporal Kaeble V.C.,
 * CCGS Corporal Teather C.V.,
 * CCGS Constable Carrière,

Ships to be built

 * Hero-class patrol vessel, nine vessels ordered 2 September 2009


 * Arctic Patrol Ship Project, 8 vessels (see National Shipbuilding Procurement Strategy)


 * Single Class Surface Combatant Project, 15 vessels (see National Shipbuilding Procurement Strategy)