About a year ago, Kristina Reinholtz became tired of drifting from job to job. The 22-year-old enlisted in the Army in 2000, hoping to be trained for a career as a heavy wheel mechanic. But while going through basic training at Fort Sill, Okla., she "blew out" her knee. In January 2001, Private Reinholtz received an honorable disabled discharge.
Granet Vietnam now joins the ranks of nations with pioneering cable-stayed bridges, thanks to innovative team efforts led by Alain Granet, site manager for Freyssinet S.A., the cable contractor on the 903-meter-long Bai Chay Bridge. It is the worlds longest that has a centrally supported, concrete cable-stayed span. The design also incorporates novel compact stay cables that reduce wind loading by trimming the support systems area. Granet led site work to implement the Paris-based firms concept for the first time. He crammed an equal amount of stay cable steel into 35% less space, allowing the bridge to withstand higher-than-planned
Many people in many ways serve the best interests of the construction industry. The editors of ENR have chosen the following individuals for innovations and achievements covered in the magazine in 2004. One has already been chosen to receive the Award of Excellence, ENRs highest honor, and is featured in the cover story of the magazines April 4, 2005 issue. click on the links below to to view more. Award of Excellence Winner 2004: Joe Maloney Award of Excellence: History For 40 years, Industry Gathers To Honor Constructions Best Ron Austin Judene Bartley Tom Boyko Mark G. Crawford Kathleen Eisbrenner
MARINO Lelio Les Marino, founder of Cambridge, Mass-based Modern Continental Construction Co. Inc., died suddenly Nov. 12 at his home in North Reading. He was 69 years old. Marino immigrated to America in 1958 from Chieti, Italy, and founded Modern in 1967. He took it from a small road and drainage contractor to the largest heavy-civil firm in New England (ENR 3/2/98 p. 30). Marinos big break was in 1996 when Bostons $14.6-billion Central Artery/Tunnel project started. Modern ultimately won over $3 billion in CA/T work. The firm currently is wrapping up five projects worth about $400 million. Modern consistently
Joseph J. Jacobs, the 88-year-old founder and current chairman of Jacobs Engineering Group Inc., died Oct. 23. He founded the Pasadena, Califl.-based global engineering and construction company in 1947. It now ranks 12th on the ENR Top 400 Contractors list for 2004, with $2.27 billion in revenue and more than 35,000 employees. Jacobs, born and raised in Brooklyn, N.Y., of Lebanese descent, and once worked for pharmaceutical maker Merck &Co., now a key client to the company. He earned three chemical engineering degrees from Polytechnic University in New York City, of which he was twice chairman of its board of
Martin’s positive attitude and endurance are the qualities people talk about most. "One thing anybody who has ever met Gregg Martin remembers about him is the enormous energy he has," says Wallace.
LaPonza was one of Meek's final four on 'Average Joe' TV show. (NBC photo by Byron Choen Cleveland cement contractor Fredo LaPonza is back from his two-month adventure as one of the bachelors seeking to win the heart of a beauty on NBC's reality TV show "Average Joe Hawaii." The premise of the show is for the unsuspecting beauty, Larissa Meek, to think she is on spectacular Kona, Hawaii, to meet handsome, sexy men, one of whom might end up to be the man of her dreams. Instead, she meets a whole host of "Average Joes" (some of whom redefine the word
Gavin Abshire Tariq Ayyad Jamey A. Barbas Michael T. Bertoulin Brian Breukelman Joseph G. Burns Fred Chace Tom Groark Don Haase Kenneth Hayes Deborah L. Jacobs Mark Klusza Col. Gregg Martin Cliff Mumm Mysore Nagaraja Kurt A. Nordquist Larry Ouellette Rick Poppe Ahmad Rahimian Brian Silverstein Lou Smith Man-Chung Tang James Timberlake Rob Watson Thomas D. Wosser Many people in many ways serve the best interests of the construction industry. The editors of ENR have chosen the following individuals for achievements covered in the magazine in 2003. One of them is selected annually to win ENR's highest honor, the Award
Elton Long (Photo courtesy of Case Corp.) Elton Long, mechanical engineer who lead the design team that developed the first American-made, integrated loader backhoe, died April 6 in Burlington, Iowa. He was 81 years old. Early in his career, Long designed heavy equipment for American Tractor Co. of Churubusco, Ind. When Case Corp., Racine, Wis., acquired ATC in 1957, Long and his colleagues were in the midst of designing a new type of machine that would eventually become the bread and butter of contractor fleets around the world. After joining Case, Long rivaled the efforts of Joseph Cyril Bamford, founder
Many people in many ways serve the best interests of the construction industry. The editors of ENR have chosen the following individuals for their newsmaking achievements. One of them is selected to win ENR's highest honor, the Award of Excellence. This year's winner Kathi Littmann joins this impressive group. Congratulations to construction's best. Rick Bell Sherwood Boehlert Paul E. Buco Timothy Buresh Denise Casalino Helmut Cerovsek Bryan Denby George E. Famulare Mamdouh Hamza Allyn E. Kilsheimer Eric Ko Kathi Littmann Jerry L. Maxwell Douglas J. McCarron Corbett Nichter Jeff F. Powell Pete K. Rahn Robert T. Ratay James Rossberg Armand