Britain | A Belfast symbol

The builder of the Titanic is struggling to stay afloat

Harland and Wolff is fighting for its life

The Harland and Wolff shipyard can be seen from a neighborhood in East Belfast.
Photograph: Jim Korpi/Redux/Eyevine
|Belfast

When it built the Titanic in 1911, Harland and Wolff was the world’s biggest shipyard. Where it once employed 35,000 people, there are now just a few hundred workers. But the 163-year-old company remains an institution whose significance to Belfast outweighs its size. Its own increasingly desperate struggle to stay afloat is of symbolic importance to the city and the wider shipbuilding industry. It also provides clues to the willingness of the new Labour government to help out troubled firms.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Taking on water”

From the July 27th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Britain

Illustration of a middle aged man, sat by candle light reading “men’s heat pump health” with an energy meter and a picture of a heat pump on the table beside him

The rise of the Net-Zero Dad

Middle-aged men care less about the problem. But they love the solution 

Sunrise Over Tower Bridge.

Backing Heathrow expansion suggests Labour is serious about growth

It is the surest sign yet that the government is up for the fight



What the rise of bubble tea says about British high streets

A sugar rush from foreign students

Why Britain has fallen behind on road safety

More than 1,600 people still die each year in road collisions

Britain’s brokers are diversifying and becoming less British

London’s depleted stockmarket is forcing them to change