Next September, students at P.S. 59 and the High School of Art and Design on Manhattan's East Side will start classes on their old block but in new digs: a 12-story building that they will share with each other and a Whole Foods market on a mixed-use site.
Maryland has a soft spot for turtles. Not only is the turtle the mascot of the state's College Park-based university, it is a symbol of the high level of environmental stewardship demanded on its transportation projects.
The second phase of the three-phase Atlantic Avenue Viaduct project was delivered six weeks ahead of schedule. This phase of the $64-million project to rehabilitate a century-old viaduct was worked on by the design-build team of Kiewit Constructors, Woodcliff Lake, N.J., and HNTB New York Engineering and Architecture, New York.
The $72-million National Museum of American Jewish History, the latest addition to historic Philadelphia's Center City, features three levels of permanent exhibits and a large space at the top level for temporary shows and events. The museum provides an in-depth view of 350 years of Jewish life through interactive media, storyboards and artifacts.
Advanced technologies and difficult site conditions posed stiff challenges to the team completing the new $66-million Engineering and Science Building at Binghamton University last May.
The latest renovation of the Union Square North Pavilion, Plaza & Playground is one of several that the park, one of New York City's most widely used, has undergone since it opened in 1839.
The $786-million, 935,000-sq-ft Pennsylvania Convention Center Expansion in Philadelphia is the largest single public works project ever undertaken in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
The Sports and Exhibition Authority of Pittsburgh and Allegheny County had a few tall tasks for the project team on its new 720,000-sq-ft arena for the National Hockey League's Pittsburgh Penguins: a tight schedule, a firm budget and construction on a steeply sloped site.
Sculpting a pair of residential towers on a patch of undeveloped land in Manhattan may sound straightforward at first blush, but the new J1 and J2 buildings on the giant West Side 75-acre Riverside South complex illustrate how starting from scratch presents its own challenges.