A steel- and polymer-shelled space uses technology from gantry cranes and retractable roofs for an arts center that doubles its footprint on demand—impressing judges who named it ENR New York's Project of the Year
Replacing a manual fuel distribution system at Newark Liberty International Airport with a new automated model—while pumping 2 million gallons of jet fuel through a facility hosting 46.1 million passengers and more than 450,000 flights last year—required a sophisticated game plan and great coordination.
The WTC Cortlandt Street Station rehabilitation was the final piece to restore the World Trade Center’s transportation capacity after the Sept. 11 attacks.
The Statue of Liberty’s 4.4 million annual visitors have gained a new 26,000-sq-ft museum with two galleries, an educational theater and a viewing platform to take in Manhattan’s skyline.
Turning a Superfund site into a renewable energy haven housing a 13-megawatt solar array that can power 3,500 homes is an admirable achievement that earned the Best Project, Energy/Industrial honor.
To remove and replace seven 50-year-old, oil-filled cables under Lake Champlain that connect terminals in Plattsburgh, N.Y., and Grand Isle, Vt., was a delicate, difficult project.
It’s not easy to be cutting edge on health care in New York, but the Helen L. and Martin S. Kimmel Pavilion for NYU Langone Health opened with a battery of new advancements.
The Memorial Sloan Kettering Bergen Cancer Center transformed a 50-year-old steel-frame office building into a 140,000-sq-ft cancer diagnostic and treatment center—with extensive upgrades to support high-end X-ray and imaging equipment, two linear accelerators, and an array of exam, infusion and treatment suites.
The newest building at Colgate University in Hamilton, N.Y., fits in with the historic campus aesthetic and also delivers a highly efficient, modern LEED Platinum structure.