Damaged during the attacks of Sept. 11, the demolition of Borough of Manhattan Community College building begins. Fiterman Hall is finally coming down, and for the City University of New York and the Lower Manhattan community, the resulting hole in the ground will be a most welcome site. Photo courtesy Airtek Environmental Corporation At the completion of the decontamination process in late May 2009 only the slab, walls and steel structure of the building remained. Miles and Shirley Fiterman donated the 15-story, 375,000-sq-ft building at 30 W. Broadway to the Borough of Manhattan Community College in 1993. The circa 1959
With the economy in decline, construction projects will likely experience an increase in claims as parties attempt to mitigate risk and salvage shrinking profit margins. In such an environment, both owners and contractors should get reacquainted with the law that governs one of the most common disputes between owners and contractors: differing site conditions. Generally, construction professionals accept that traditional site condition clauses control the risk associated with differing site conditions. New York case law, however, calls that conclusion into question. WHITE Over 30 years ago, New York courts issued two rulings which imposed liability on owners for their failure
Overlooking the massive jobsite at 1 World Trade Center in Lower Manhattan, Dan Tishman, dressed immaculately in a navy blue suit with a red and pink striped tie, stands watching the 300-plus construction workers scurrying around below him. Photo by Michael Falco Co-owners John Vickers (L) and Dan Tishman (R) have executed a plan aimed at maintaining a presence across all sectors. Years of hard work below grade at 1 World Trade Center culminated in 2008 as Tishman Construction brought the building out of the ground. Related Links: Four Generations of Tishman He shakes his head. “Sometimes I think I
The origins of Tishman Construction Corporation are not unlike the humble beginnings of many small businesses started by European immigrants in the late 19th Century. And while it’s not unheard of to still see some of those businesses in existence today, you’d be hard-pressed to find one of them that has remained family-owned while making as big an impact on the New York region as Julius Tishman & Sons. Related Links: Contractor of the Year Julius Started in 1898, three years after Julius Tishman moved his family from Poland to New York, the business was borne out of a desire
Many construction contracts contain “boilerplate” language that does not seem to have anything to do with the actual work that a contractor has to perform. However, these “boilerplate” sections can have a tremendous impact on the contract’s scope of work. Therefore, to protect themselves against unpleasant surprises on the jobsite (or in court trying to collect on a claim) contractors are well-served to read the “boilerplate” so that they fully understand the scope of work that they are binding themselves to perform by signing a contract. ANGELILLO However, careful contractors cannot stop there. In many instances, in one simple sentence,
The economy may finally showing signs of stabilizing, and the decline in certain sectors is slowing down, but we are not out of the woods yet. The ability to get a prospect’s attention and make the most out of every meeting and phone call is critical in a tough economy. If you refine your sales technique now, the good habits you develop will only help you in the long run, and yes, help you when the economy gets back up and running. Try the following tips to refine your sales technique, and hopefully, close more deals: MARTIN Use Questions and
Skanska has been awarded a $134 million contract to construct a hospital in Hopewell, New Jersey that will replace the 112-year-old Mercer Hospital in Trenton, New Jersey for its customer, Capital Health. Related Links: 2009 Residential Permits Fall at “Alarming” Rate NYCEDC Issues RFQs for First Willets Point Contracts City to Rehab Aging Staten Island Pier Elementary School Breaks Ground in Waterbury, Conn. Developer of TechCity Releases Green Master Plan NYC DOB Launches Online Permit Program NYC Seeks Firm to Lease and Operate Portion of Manhattan’s East River Waterfront DIA/WRKS Designs Administrative Offices for NYIT Skanska is responsible for both
The owner of a former upstate industrial complex recently released a green master plan for the redevelopment of TechCity – once an IBM manufacturing and business campus. Photo: courtesy of Linden Alschuler & Kaplan, Inc. The TechCity Master Plan will transform the 260-acre, 2.5 million-sq-ft former IBM manufacturing and business campus made up of 27 low-rise buildings into a 21st Century sustainable development. Related Links: 2009 Residential Permits Fall at “Alarming” Rate NYCEDC Issues RFQs for First Willets Point Contracts City to Rehab Aging Staten Island Pier Skanksa to Build New Hospital in Hopewell, New Jersey for $134 Million Elementary
The New York City Economic Development Corporation has announced two separate Requests for Qualifications (RFQs) for firms to provide construction management and design services for the Willets Point Offsite Infrastructure Project; a $150 million project that will connect the 62-acre development site to existing transportation, water and sewage facilities helping to link Willets Point to its surrounding neighborhoods such as Flushing and Corona. Photo: Courtesy of Method Media LLC Construction of the pile restoration is scheduled to be completed by this summer but the pier will remain open to the public throughout because construction is taking place underwater. Related Links:
New York-based architects DIA/WRKS, have been chosen to design the administrative offices of New York Institute of Technology’s School of Architecture and Design. “DIA/WRKS was perfect for this project because of their fl air for design and ability to maximize space and natural light while simultaneously reflecting my streamlined, contemporary and eccentric sensibilities,” said Judith DiMaio, dean of NYIT’s architecture and design department. Expanding by 1,000 ft, the 2,500-sq-ft dean’s office is slated for completion this fall. Related Links: 2009 Residential Permits Fall at “Alarming” Rate NYCEDC Issues RFQs for First Willets Point Contracts City to Rehab Aging Staten Island