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Eva Fedderly covers architecture, design, and social justice for ENR and Architectural Digest. Fedderly is currently writing about a book about New York City’s landmark decision to close Rikers Island. She is a graduate of Cal Berkeley and Harvard University. Follow her on Twitter @EvaFedderly.
After suffering from years of lack of maintenance and water intrusion from Hurricane Katrina, the Dew Drop Inn, the legendary New Orleans hotel and nightclub, which once boasted greats like Ray Charles and Little Richard, is finding new life as contractors near completion of a historic renovation before the landmark’s planned opening this fall.
As the 2022 hurricane season begins, cities such as Lake Charles, La., are still recovering from and repairing major damage caused by unprecedented back-to-back storms in 2020 and 2021.
When developers attempted to convert a 200-acre defunct golf course in Houston into a commercial development, various groups coalesced with another idea.
Vijay Associates, a federal and state subcontractor, padded hours on New York and Massachusetts transit and other projects, says U.S. Attorney in Boston.
The agency also announced Oct. 21 details of its new design-build program, a departure from the traditional low-bid contracting method it was required to use historically