With crews working in an active shipping channel, safety—both for the team and the environment—was a crucial focus of the Brightman Street Bridge replacement in Fall River, Mass.
The iconic Great Dome of Building 10 on the Massachusetts Institute of Technology campus was closed off for more than 70 years from the Barker Engineering Library reading room, which is located directly below.
Developed on an adjacent parcel to the original campus, the $22-million Village at RiverMead project expands and revitalizes a 20-year-old continuing care retirement community.
The 120,000-sq-ft Peter T. Paul College of Business and Economics houses 16 classrooms, a 208-seat auditorium, 28 high-tech breakout rooms, administration space and an executive development suite.
Developer Chris Yule demanded excellence for the conversion of historic Abbot Mill into a 239,000-sq-ft, 131-unit apartment complex, and he was willing to rework the project to achieve it.
Conceived as a "living laboratory" that features research and demonstrations of advanced building energy technologies and processes, the 60,000-sq-ft Fraunhofer Center for Sustainable Energy was built in a century-old mill building in Boston.
To ensure that the 512,000-sq-ft Albert Sherman Center at the University of Massachusetts Medical School on the Worcester campus could accommodate the ever-evolving world of biomedical research, its project scope was regularly altered to meet changing programming needs.
One year after the crystal anniversary of ENR Southwest's Best Projects competition, judges from throughout the Southwest were once again called upon to arbitrate the more than 100 construction projects chosen by the submitters as the best works of their firms.
A building that was once a boarding house during the World War II era and then a motel got a complete makeover when the project team was tasked with fulfilling the owner's vision of sustainable yet affordable housing space in Santa Fe, N.M.
Las Vegas might be known for the phrase, "What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas," but it's what doesn't typically happen in the city—natural disasters—that made it attractive to Cobalt Data Centers.