Related Links: Non-Residential Market Continues to Suffer in 2010 Stimulus Dollars Drive Megaprojects in the Mid-Atlantic Clark Starts $229 Million Medical Research Project at Aberdeen Forrester Keeps Active in K-12 Heery Lands $44 Million MATOC Bozzuto Moves Ahead on $40 Million Mixed-Use Development Daniel J. Keating Lands Three Eastern Penn Projects J.J. DeLuca Starts Four Pa. Projects Holder Starts $56 Million School ARLINGTON, VA—Clark Construction broke ground this fall on a 144,000-sq-ft research facility for Virginia Tech in Arlington, Va. The project includes six stories of office and research space, one story of retail space, and three levels of below-grade
Related Links: Non-Residential Market Continues to Suffer in 2010 Stimulus Dollars Drive Megaprojects in the Mid-Atlantic Clark Starts $229 Million Medical Research Project at Aberdeen Forrester Keeps Active in K-12 Heery Lands $44 Million MATOC Clark Breaks Ground on Virginia Tech Research Facility Daniel J. Keating Lands Three Eastern Penn Projects J.J. DeLuca Starts Four Pa. Projects Holder Starts $56 Million School ARLINGTON, VA—Bozzuto Development Company and Chesapeake Community Advisors began construction of the $40 million The Views at Clarendon, a mixed-use, mixed-income development in Arlington, Va. The development will consist of eight stories of apartments atop two stories that
Related Links: Non-Residential Market Continues to Suffer in 2010 Stimulus Dollars Drive Megaprojects in the Mid-Atlantic Forrester Keeps Active in K-12 Heery Lands $44 Million MATOC Clark Breaks Ground on Virginia Tech Research Facility Bozzuto Moves Ahead on $40 Million Mixed-Use Development Daniel J. Keating Lands Three Eastern Penn Projects J.J. DeLuca Starts Four Pa. Projects Holder Starts $56 Million School WASHINGTON, DC-In September, Clark Construction of Bethesda won a $229.3-million contract to build the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Chemical Defense Replacement Facility at Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Harford County, Md. The 526,255 sq-ft facility is expected to
Related Links: Non-Residential Market Continues to Suffer in 2010 Stimulus Dollars Drive Megaprojects in the Mid-Atlantic Clark Starts $229 Million Medical Research Project at Aberdeen Forrester Keeps Active in K-12 Heery Lands $44 Million MATOC Clark Breaks Ground on Virginia Tech Research Facility Bozzuto Moves Ahead on $40 Million Mixed-Use Development J.J. DeLuca Starts Four Pa. Projects Holder Starts $56 Million School NARBETH, PA–The Daniel J. Keating Co. picked up three projects in eastern Pennsylvania this fall. Ground was broken for the new 72,000 sq-ft West Philadelphia High School, Oct. 27. The three-story school is expected to complete by fall
Related Links: Non-Residential Market Continues to Suffer in 2010 Stimulus Dollars Drive Megaprojects in the Mid-Atlantic Clark Starts $229 Million Medical Research Project at Aberdeen Heery Lands $44 Million MATOC Clark Breaks Ground on Virginia Tech Research Facility Bozzuto Moves Ahead on $40 Million Mixed-Use Development Daniel J. Keating Lands Three Eastern Penn Projects J.J. DeLuca Starts Four Pa. Projects Holder Starts $56 Million School ROCKVILLE, MD—In a down economy, Forrester Construction of Rockville, Md., has found opportunities in the K-12 market. In October, the company began preconstruction on the $40 million 250,000-sq-ft modernization of Anacostia Senior High School in
Related Links: Non-Residential Market Continues to Suffer in 2010 Stimulus Dollars Drive Megaprojects in the Mid-Atlantic Clark Starts $229 Million Medical Research Project at Aberdeen Forrester Keeps Active in K-12 Clark Breaks Ground on Virginia Tech Research Facility Bozzuto Moves Ahead on $40 Million Mixed-Use Development Daniel J. Keating Lands Three Eastern Penn Projects J.J. DeLuca Starts Four Pa. Projects Holder Starts $56 Million School HAMPTON, VA—Heery International of Washington, D.C., was awarded its second U.S. Air Force Multiple Award Task Order Contract (MATOC), for the complete renovation of Langley Air Force Base’s Hospital to an outpatient clinic. Located in
Related Links: Non-Residential Market Continues to Suffer in 2010 Stimulus Dollars Drive Megaprojects in the Mid-Atlantic Clark Starts $229 Million Medical Research Project at Aberdeen Forrester Keeps Active in K-12 Heery Lands $44 Million MATOC Clark Breaks Ground on Virginia Tech Research Facility Bozzuto Moves Ahead on $40 Million Mixed-Use Development Daniel J. Keating Lands Three Eastern Penn Projects J.J. DeLuca Starts Four Pa. Projects SALISBURY, MD—Holder Construction of Atlanta broke ground on the new $56 million Perdue School of Business at Salisbury University in September. The 112,800-sq-ft facility will house a 200-seat auditorium, laboratories, 20 classrooms and a student
After years of gaining strength, the health-care sector took a dramatic pause this year as credit tightened, the economy softened and national debate over health-care reform created uncertainty on the horizon. Skanska USA Building is working on the $53-million Carilion Clinic, which features an imaging department with MRIs and CT scanners, diagnostics, nuclear medicine and 208 patient/exam rooms. Clark Construction Group and Balfour Beatty Construction are working on the $641.4-million Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. Nationally, McGraw-Hill Construction research shows that health-care project starts dropped 36% from 110 million sq ft of new construction in 2008 to 70 million
New York State Dept. of Transportation officials swiftly are preparing design concepts for a new crossing to replace the Crown Point Bridge, abruptly closed in October due to unexpectedly high levels of pier deterioration. Meanwhile, contractors are racing to build temporary vehicular ferry-terminal facilities at Lake Champlain between New York and Vermont as a stopgap measure. Photo: AP/Wideworld New York-Vermont crossing was shut down abruptly on Oct. 16 after inspectors found unexpectedly severe pier deterioration, possibly due to ice pressure. + Image NYSDOT, in conjunction with the Vermont Agency of Transportation, on Oct. 16 shut down the 80-year-old, 2,184-ft-long steel
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is in the beginning stages of a $72 million plan to expand the Syracuse VA Medical Center Spinal Cord Injury/Disease Center in Syracuse, New York which will include the addition of more than 160,000 sq ft to the medical center as well as extensive renovations to the existing facilities. Image: Clark Construction Group, LLC The $72 million plan to expand the Syracuse VA Medical Center Spinal Cord Injury/Disease Center will include the addition of more than 160,000 sq ft as well as extensive renovations to the existing facilities. The centerpiece of the project, the