San Antonio Independent School District’s Alamo Stadium, built in 1939 by the Works Progress Administration, is a nationally registered historic landmark.
In 2010, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Galveston District launched a $52-million design-build project to repair nine work areas at six dilapidated jetties and dikes along the 750-mile Texas coastline.
After decades of political, funding and environmental challenges, Austin’s Water Treatment Plant No. 4 was completed, commissioned and started up in November 2014.
Constant challenges for the project team included keeping the existing plant operating at peak performance during heavy construction, keeping plant staff safe, outfall permitting, high water levels of the Mississippi River and maintaining safe site access for the plant staff.
Abandoned for 10 years and overtaken by squatters, the century-old movie theater was transformed into a multifunctional space for San Francisco’s American Conservatory Theater.
After a partial roof collapse at a 1940s-era blimp hangar on the former Marine Corps Air Station in Tustin, the building was red-tagged and no one was permitted to enter.
Located on a naval air station in San Diego Bay, the new Fitness and Liberty Center fits with its historic setting while incorporating modern amenities.