This marvelous new book presents the history, evolution, and prodigious productivity of the Vancouver firm of Robert Alan Ltd (RAL), widely recognized as the world's foremost designer of tugs. Over the last two decades, the name Robert Allan has become synonymous with tug design, but the path was not direct, nor even particularly pre-ordained. This book does an outstanding job of charting the evolution of RAL, and illustrating by turns, the role of talent, hard work, perseverance, opportunity, team-building and even, occasionally, luck in forging an international success story.
There are many different and intertwined stories in the almost 600 pages of this beautifully produced volume: the story of resolute and committed emigration, the story of dogged determination in establishing and sustaining an independent design house through trying times; the story of design evolution and innovation; and the story of recruiting, developing, and retaining the talent to continue to be at the forefront of the industry providing workboats for the world.
The RAL story is, for its first eighty-eight years from 1928 to 2006, a dynastic story. Through three generations of Robert Allans (grandfather, father and son, carefully distinguished as Robert, Bob, and Rob) the firm has grown and expanded in ways that might never have been foreseen by its founder. The first Robert Allan graduated as a naval architect from the University of Glasgow in 1907, working at Fairfields, Cammell Laird, and Yarrows before immigrating to Canada in 1919, working first at Coughlin's Shipyard before joining Wallace Shipyards in North Vancouver (from 1921 known as Burrard Drydock Company Ltd.) with a commission to design Princess Louise for the Canadian Pacific Steamship Company. In 1927 he struck out on his own, establishing a design partnership named Allan & Stackhouse, then independently as Robert Allan in 1928. The initial years were very lean.
Bob Allan (the son) studied naval architecture as an engineering student at the University of British Columbia from 1934-36 but had to withdraw from the program due to serious illness. Fortunately, he had been well tutored by his father (including developing considerable ship-modelling skills in his teens) and obtained work in Burrard Drydock Company during the war, including serving as project manager for the conversion of the passenger-cargo ship HMCS Prince Rupert into an armed merchant cruiser. The end of the war saw a formal teaming of father and son in the home basement office, developing construction drawings for a series of colliers for France as part of war-recovery efforts.
Rob Allan (the grandson) duly followed in his father's and grandfather's footsteps when, after a couple of years at the University of British Columbia, he entered his grandfather's alma mater, the University of Glasgow, to study for a naval architecture degree. This was followed by a couple of years in England working for Burness, Corlett & Partners, the leading tug design consultants of the day. In the light of subsequent developments in Robert Allan Ltd., this was indeed a fortuitous experience. He returned to Canada in 1973 to join the family business, succeeding to the leadership of the firm following the tragically early loss of both parents to cancer.
Today the name Robert Allan Ltd. is almost synonymous with tugs, but as this history makes clear, that journey was neither direct nor self-evident. The path of growth of the company business was more a case of being in the right place at the right time, prepared with the skills and spirit of innovation to respond to emerging market demands for specialized vessels. The various chapters chart the wide menu of designs produced, from fishing vessels, to coastal patrol vessels, mission boats, ferries, workboats of every variety, research vessels, flreboats and, of course, tugs.
Early on, the company's small craft credentials were established by yacht work and the reconstruction of the British Columbia seiner fleet in the years from 1942 to 1944. Already imbued with the urge to innovate, RAL designed their first steel fishing vessel in 1958, and developed a line of beach seiners, fast, shallow-draft vessels designed to access the limited short-term fishery openings.
The growth of the tug business and expertise was driven by the demand for escort tugs following the Exxon Valdez disaster of 1989, but also enabled by RAL's embrace of computer-aided design (CAD) in 1985 and azimuthing drives for tugs in the late 1980s. It is impossible to do justice to the variety of tug designs that RAL have produced to serve a wide spectrum of missions, but a third of the book elaborates that story very well, supported by a wonderful collection of photographs and plentiful drawings (mostly inboard/
outboard profiles and plan views). There is one sole body plan showing the hull lines of RAL's signature RA star escort tug; it would have been of interest to see more lines plans included, but even with that minor quibble, the book is exceptionally well-illustrated.
Throughout the book the clear story that emerges is of success built on a firm philosophical foundation of design serving the requirement. This has extended to significant effort in influencing the regulatory rules governing design requirements. Among all his other accomplishments and accolades, Rob Allan considers his effective efforts to harmonize regulations for the design and construction of tugboats to be one of his most significant career accomplishments.
Finally, there is a substantial people story here. The collective RAL success is evident in chapters twenty-three and twenty-five, with the generous acknowledgement of individual contributions, and acknowledgment from within of the inspiring and enabling
work environment that made it possible. With Rob's retirement signaling the end of the naval architectural dynasty, it is a particularly fitting segue that the company has transitioned to employee-ownership.
In sum, this is a beautifully produced and well-written book that will appeal very much to all who admire tugs and desire to learn more of the process that shapes them.