The rehabilitation of historic Union Station's 9,500-sq-ft Grand Hall and Market called for restoration of cornices and terrazzo floors, the addition of a 90-ft bar, coffee shop and train display, and installation of a projection system to support one of North America's largest multimedia shows.
Downtown Detroit's 10-story Z, so named for its zig-zagging floor plate, combines a 1,300-space parking structure with the works of more than 27 mural and graffiti artists from around the world.
Health care long has espoused the influence of environment on healing, a relationship Cincinnati's Mercy Health – West Hospital develops to an extent rarely seen in a contemporary hospital setting.
The 1,000-sq-ft glass structure known as The Cube provides Westfield Old Orchard, an upscale, outdoor shopping center in suburban Chicago, a freestanding, climate-controlled venue for promotional events, community performances, interactive displays and live entertainment.
A Holocaust memorial, an airport runway, an orangutan habitat and a tied-arch bridge are among the enterprises that a panel of industry professionals awarded top honors for ENR Midwest's Best Projects competition, an annual program recognizing outstanding design and construction in a variety of categories.
With classroom and administrative wings, the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools' Earl Shapiro Hall is quite simple, though atypical forms and detailing required tight coordination among specialty trades, which met regularly with contractor and designers to review intent and feasibility.
Performed in Chicago's historic Merchandise Mart, the 525,000-sq-ft build-out of Motorola Mobility's new headquarters required 650,000 labor hours and up to 480 construction workers during peak periods.
Though the $31-million Mary Institute and St. Louis Country Day School STEM Building places special emphasis on science, technology, engineering and mathematics, it also serves as a real-world lesson in sustainable design, as its owner intended.
Meticulous analysis and planning resulted in a decision to erect an onsite, concrete batch plant for construction of Easton-Bell Sports Inc's $31-million, 813,000-sq-ft office and automated warehouse center.
To introduce Michigan's vast recreational offerings to a demographic far removed from the wilderness, construction team members converted Detroit's 120-year-old Globe Trading Company Building—a condemned 40,000-sq-ft structure—into a showcase for the state's natural resources.