As part of the Solar Act of 2012, the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities created a program to encourage solar utility companies and contractors to redevelop existing lands into solar generation facilities.
The new 220,000-sq-ft Whitney Museum of American Art is located at 99 Gansevoort St. in Manhattan’s meatpacking district, downtown from its previous location on the Upper East Side.
The $1.4-billion Fulton Center is a major portal into the New York City subway system, with 300,000 travelers passing through the transportation hub each day.
Built in 1929, Kings Theatre on Flatbush Avenue is the largest indoor theater in Brooklyn and the third-largest theater in New York City. After closing its doors in 1977, the theater slowly fell into disrepair.
The National Synchrotron Light Source-II, a 600,000-sq-ft, third-generation synchrotron light source facility at Brookhaven National Laboratory, is the newest and most advanced facility of its kind in the world.
The New York University Langone Medical Center Tisch Hospital infrastructure upgrade was implemented after the mechanical, electrical and plumbing systems, located in the cellar and on the ground floor of the building, were largely destroyed by flooding in the wake of Hurricane Sandy.
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, the world’s largest and oldest private cancer center, has opened a new outpatient center in West Harrison, N.Y.
Funded by the New York State Dept. of Environmental Conservation, the $7-million Lake George Beach Day Use Area project was the third in a string of three similar projects along the shore of Lake George.
Lenox Health Greenwich Village is a 24-hour emergency care center operating within the landmark O’Toole Building, formerly occupied by St. Vincent’s Medical Center.