Planning and constructing a 128-ft-tall, 139-ft-long, 62-ft-wide, 2,800-ton cracking furnace, then transporting it a mile before carefully connecting it was a puzzle that took some out-of-the-box thinking and next-level coordination.
The firm’s work in Port Arthur, Texas reaches beyond LNG export terminal development to also include two 600-plus-acre marshland restoration projects and grants to 18 hunger-relief organizations
With multibillion-dollar projects in the pipeline, such as Texas Instruments’ $30-billion investment nearby, firms in Dallas are staying busy despite labor shortages