BWA | JUL 2026 49 SHAPE Australia has spent more than three decades building a reputation around technically demanding interiors, refurbishments and liveenvironment project delivery, but the business today is broader than that legacy might suggest. The company describes itself as a national fitout and construction services specialist, operating across all capital cities and a number of large regional centres, with capabilities spanning fitout and refurbishment, design and build, façade remediation, modular construction, new build, aftercare and facilities maintenance. Its own project archive says it has delivered more than 7,250 projects valued at over $10 billion. That widening capability is central to the company’s current profile. SHAPE’s investor materials say it is steadily transforming from a fitout and refurbishment specialist into a diversified construction services leader, and its sector mix now runs across commercial office, government, defence, education, health, hotels and hospitality, and retail. The company also says it has more than 746 people nationally, while a FY25 trading update described an award-winning culture and a Net Promoter Score of +88. The financial performance in FY25 suggests that broader model is working. SHAPE reported FY25 revenue of $956.9 million, up 14.1% year on year, EBITDA of $32.7 million, up 26.3%, and profit after tax attributable to shareholders of $21.1 million, up 31.9%. Its FY25 results announcement described that outcome as strong financial and operational performance, supported by diversified work across multiple sectors and geographies. What makes SHAPE especially interesting editorially is that the company sits in a part of the market where execution detail matters. It is often working in live hospitals, operating workplaces, education environments and public facilities where disruption has to be tightly
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