This project transformed a 125-kilometer road in the Central American nation of Belize, between the country’s international airport and the Mexican border, from a frequently flooded and unsafe passage into a vastly more sustainable artery.
A beautiful but treacherous stretch of two-lane highway in the eastern forests of British Columbia has been smoothed out thanks to innovative solutions for building four bridges, nine viaducts and seven earthwalls on steep slopes.
An avenue originally serving as a boundary between the city and its suburbs has evolved into an urban highway thanks to the construction of two separate platforms for each direction of traffic.
A flat muskeg maze-like landscape laced with ponds and streams isolated Whatì—a remote settlement of the Tłı̨chǫ First Nations people in Canada’s Northwest Territories—for much of the year.