At the request of Chevron, Versabar Inc. developed the VersaCutter, a subsea cutting tool that provides a safer, more efficient and environmentally friendly way of severing subsea structures such as platforms and pipelines no longer in operation.
The $23.8-million, 89,500-sq-ft student center at Tidewater Community College in Virginia Beach was built in the middle of a five-acre stormwater retention pond.
A joint-use public partnership, the library serves both Tidewater Community College and the City of Virginia Beach and required the team to meet the programmatic needs of both users.
Plans for the 160,246-sq-ft Physical Sciences Complex were updated dramatically late in the design process when a $10-million grant was received from the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
Five new residence halls—part of a University of Virginia effort to overhaul its Alderman Road community for first-year students—were delivered in three phases.
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.