The $93-million, 29-story FNB Tower at 401 Graham Street brought something new to the sparkling skyline in Charlotte: a true mixed-use high rise, and one with a sleek, reflective façade that stands out among its neighbors, including the Charlotte Knights and Charlotte Panthers Stadiums.
As the Tampa area’s tech hub grows, established area manufacturing solutions provider Jabil chose St. Petersburg for a global headquarters for its network of more than a quarter million employees.
The 635,000-sq-ft Vantage South End has planted its flag firmly in Charlotte’s skyline, with two 11-story buildings, one 10-story building and free-standing, 1,710-space parking garage.
As soon as BE&K completed a 90,000-sq-ft campus for flu vaccine manufacturer Seqirus, it turned its sights to expanding Seqirus’ existing warehouse space by 48,000 square feet, including 12,000 square feet of pharmaceutical-grade vaccine cold storage—the largest in the country.
Less than 10 months after being handed a hand-drawn sketch of its building requirements, McCrory Construction delivered a 102,000-sq-ft, $80-million manufacturing facility for Pregis Performance Flexibles, which will produce blown film for the food industry. The project broke ground in January 2021 and wrapped up in September of the same year.
Unity Park, Greenville’s newest, is bringing new life and vitality to an underutilized space around the Reedy River with four playgrounds, 4,100-sq-ft splash pad, green spaces, architecturally and aesthetically significant picnic shelters and 10,000-sq-ft welcome center and flexible event space.
When students and parents enter the new 230,000-sq-ft building, they’re met by spaces for computer-controlled machinery, robotics, metalworking, mechatronics and engineering—all of which highlight the school’s advanced manufacturing curriculum based on science, technology, engineering, arts and math (STEAM) concepts.
A fixture in the heart of Atlanta’s Buckhead district since the 1950s, Pace Academy has been transformed by a three-story, 36,500-sq-ft addition that contains two music rooms, science and makers classrooms, administrative offices and gymnasium.
The new 507-ft-long South West 1st Street bridge provides a stylish connection between downtown Miami and the Little Havana neighborhood, with a 315-ft double-leaf bascule span across the 125-ft-wide Miami River navigation channel.
When the American Bridge team was awarded the $56.8-million design-build contract to build its replacement, the original Pinellas Bayway bridge had reached the end of its useful life and had no dedicated multimodal capacities—and was often stuck open or closed.