After four years of planning and site preparation, the team successfully integrated 19 historic buildings into a mixed-use development encompassing a full city block.
When an electrical service delay threatened to derail the schedule, the project team says it collaboratively orchestrated a plan to bring the project back on track.
Delivering a large greenfield distribution center and regional headquarters on an 81-acre site, the design-build team minimized environmental impacts by protecting onsite wetlands and the adjacent Five Forks Civil War battlefield.
Part of the revitalization of the neighborhood surrounding the University of Maryland, this $1.2-million, 7,500-sq-ft, open-concept workspace offers what the project team calls cutting-edge research opportunities in machine learning and data science and also connects students with industries that are eager for new talent.
The $39-million main cable dehumidification system installation represents a dramatic advancement in bridge maintenance, according to the project team.
Innovation was the key to adding a fourth traffic lane to a congested 2,856-ft-long crossing along a critical route connecting central Maryland with the Chesapeake Bay Bridges and the Eastern Shore.
The team says the $201-million project represents Carnegie Mellon University’s “future vision as an ecology of active learning, research and resources.”
As the largest non-residence hall project in Longwood’s history, the $32.5-million, 84,000-sq-ft building was a high-profile effort in more ways than one.