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Working at the busiest international border crossing in the Western Hemisphere, the Hensel Phelps team deconstructed and replaced existing pedestrian and bus inspection facilities while maintaining vital traffic flow between California and Mexico.
This project provided a new underground power duct bank system and manholes between multiple substations that serve a mission-critical federal government facility.
This renovation transformed an old department store into a modern 12-screen motion picture house with in-theater dining, a full bar, a video store and vintage arcade.
For this large and complex expansion of a 35-year-old shopping center, the engineering team implemented one of the first highly ductile bolted SidePlate moment frame systems on the West Coast.
Constructed in 1912, the building originally housed compressed air and hydraulic power-generation equipment and served as an electrical substation that transformed and distributed electrical power for a 69-acre shipyard along San Francisco’s waterfront.
This LEED Platinum redevelopment includes a two-story classroom and science building, temporary modular classrooms and remodeled classrooms and lounge areas.
When the 95-year-old buildings that comprise Alameda High School could not meet California seismic standards, the Alameda Unified School District decided to tackle a major upgrade and retrofit that would also provide a 21st-century learning environment.