Coverage related to the COVID-19 pandemic continued to attract the most page views, but there were also several engineering failures that garnered much attention as well.
ENR New York's website was active this year as the number of readers that spent time viewing news and project pages grew from the prior year. Related Links: Bloomberg Unveils Post-Sandy Strategy; Names NYCEDC to Oversee 2 NYC Groups Granted FEMA's 1st Round of Post-Sandy Recovery Funds Recovery Work Takes Center Stage Some Tristate Projects Suffer Sandy's Blow City Puts Old Rail Cars to Use Sandy's Combined N.Y.-N.J. Damage Estimate Stands at About $62.8B Cuomo Forms 3 Groups to Improve NYS's Natural Disaster Preparedness Carpenters Nail Down Volunteer Work in Sandy-Stricken Areas Cuomo: Sandy Cost NYS about $33 Billion After
Graphic courtesy of Tishman On one level of the World Trade Centers 16-acre, four-level basement, there are multiple and often competing stakeholders (each represented by a different color on the map). Courtesy Dig This LLC Dig This patrons can operate a Caterpillar D5 track-type bulldozer to create earthen mounds. Related Links: Editors' Picks: ENR's Top Stories of 2011 ENR readers kept many conversations alive this year—including and about types of innovation on major construction projects around the globe, a big iron playground in Vegas, tech trends on jobsites, trouble with BIM and viewpoints that struck more than a few nerves.Some