Attlon Strengthens Growth with Integration of Vitoria-Based SVC Seguridad

This alliance is part of Attlon's growth strategy, expanding its scope of activity and territorial presence.

Generic image of two hands in formal attire shaking over a desk, representing a business acquisition or merger.
IA

Generic image of two hands in formal attire shaking over a desk, representing a business acquisition or merger.

Attlon, the industrial security group, has announced the integration of Vitoria-based firm SVC Seguridad, advancing its growth strategy and expanding its operational capacity in an increasingly demanding market.

The industrial security group Attlon, formed from the merger of Electro Alavesa and Valencia-based Cottés, has announced the integration of Vitoria-based firm SVC Seguridad. This move is part of the group's growth and consolidation strategy, aiming to transform the critical and fragmented industrial security sector in the Iberian Peninsula.
SVC Seguridad, founded in Vitoria in 1990, boasts over 35 years of experience and has branches in the Alava capital, Bilbao, and Donostia. Additionally, it operates its own 24-hour Alarm Receiving Center, offering response services and key holding with security guards year-round, which is one of its main distinguishing assets.
With this integration, Attlon's electronic security division will now comprise a hundred specialized professionals. This expansion broadens the group's scope of activity, strengthens its territorial presence, and consolidates a more comprehensive offering for sectors where operational continuity and security are critical, such as logistics, food, energy, the pharmaceutical industry, manufacturing, and essential infrastructure.

"The shared objective is to offer a more complete, innovative, and efficient response to the new challenges of industrial security."

a company spokesperson
Attlon's roadmap includes organic growth, talent attraction, development of new services, and future acquisitions. The incorporation of SVC Seguridad adds a company with experience, structure, and reputation “in a strategic territory” to the group, while for SVC, the operation represents “an opportunity for growth without losing identity”.