HB Reavis Group appoints Marian Herman as CEO

HB Reavis Group appoints Marian Herman as a new CEO

Marian Herman has become the new Chief Executive of HB Reavis Group with immediate effect. Marian moves into the role from his position as Group Chief Financial Officer and Board Member of HB Reavis. He has been with the company for more than eight years.

 

Radim Rimanek simultaneously becomes Deputy Chief Executive of HB Reavis Group, which is a newly-created role. Radim has been a Member of the HB Reavis Board for more than five years, having joined HB Reavis in 2012.

 

Pavel Trenka steps down as Chief Executive of HB Reavis Group as part of a long-planned succession, having fulfilled his five-year term in the role. He joined the firm in 2007 and will remain with the company as a Non-Executive Board Director alongside Maarten Hulshoff and Ivan Chrenko, the company’s founder.

 

Under the new leadership, HB Reavis will continue delivering on its business strategy to develop truly remarkable, people-centric office and retail-led spaces that enhance productivity, well-being and overall experience for those that use them as well as the surrounding communities.

 

Pavel said: “It gives me great pleasure to pass on the baton at HB Reavis to Marian and Radim, who have played hugely influential roles in HB Reavis’ rapid growth in recent years to become Europe’s leading innovative workplace provider. As Non-Executive Board Director, I look forward to helping Marian and Radim shape and deliver our ambitious strategy.

 

HB Reavis has rapidly grown into one of Europe’s largest developers with operations in Central and Eastern Europe, Germany and the United Kingdom, and a pipeline of over 20 developments across its portfolio.

 

HB Reavis is currently working on a number of showpiece developments including Varso Place in Warsaw, a 53-storey mix use tower designed by Foster + Partners that will be one of Europe’s tallest buildings when complete. Other schemes underway are Bratislava’s Nivy Station, Budapest’s Agora office complex, and the redevelopment of Elizabeth House, which is situated next to Waterloo station, London’s busiest transport hub. 

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