A former restaurant and brewery inside the National Post Office Museum was fit out to house the William H. Gross Stamp Gallery, home to the world's largest stamp collection.
Renovation of the historic Wonder Bread building brought new life to a dilapidated landmark factory in the Shaw neighborhood in northwest Washington, D.C.The restoration included a complex system of internal facade bracing and the underpinning of all exterior walls.
One of the largest redevelopments in Washington, D.C., history, the $465-million CityCenterDC project on 10 acres required more than 1,400 tradespeople at peak construction.
This multiphased project included a complete interior renovation and the structural restoration of the historic 7,500-sq-ft chapel building, originally constructed in 1893 on the campus of Georgetown University.
Developed as a pilot sustainable facility for the state of Maryland, the $84-million operations center was originally targeted for LEED Silver certification, but the team was able to design-construct it to achieve LEED Gold status.
Designed to achieve LEED Platinum certification, the 280,000-sq-ft Dunbar Senior High School is the most energy-efficient school in the District of Columbia.
From an innovative energy center to a state-of-the-art ice arena, ENR MidAtlantic's Best Projects of 2014 represent excellence across a wide spectrum of project types.
This 700,000-sq-ft, cast-in-place building features several unique structural and architectural elements, including a materials lab with a concrete strong floor and strong wall suitable for testing; the integration between structural steel and cast-in-place concrete; more than 800 architectural columns; and 38,000 sq ft of architecturally exposed slab.
Part of the CSX National Gateway Clearance Improvement Program, the Jones and Laughlin Tunnel at the South Side Works increases rail clearances and enables trains to carry double-stack inter-modal container cars.