Building Indeed’s Austin office involved renovating a five-story, 183,911-sq-ft space into a collaborative work area with a café, game room, gym, library and break rooms.
Source: New feed
Building Indeed’s Austin office involved renovating a five-story, 183,911-sq-ft space into a collaborative work area with a café, game room, gym, library and break rooms.
Source: New feed
As a three-story market and restaurant with 13 venues for culinary shopping and gourmet dining, the $19.5-million Eataly Dallas location was designed with high-end finishes from around the world to create the feel of an Italian marketplace.
Source: New feed
Meticulous coordination between multiple contractors was central to completing the $79.6-million University of Texas at Dallas Sciences Building.
Source: New feed
ENR’s 20-city average cost indexes, wages and materials prices. Historical data and details for ENR’s 20 cities can be found at ENR.com/economics
Source: New feed
Anirban Basu, chief economist for Associated Builders and Contractors and CEO of consulting firm Sage Policy Group, shares his economic outlook for the construction industry in 2022.
Source: New feed
To deliver the AIRA Residences project in Kuala Lumpur, builders had to overcome the differing challenges of transforming an existing 17-story, 64-unit residential structure built more than 40 years ago into a near replica of the sparkling, brand-new 18-story “twin” they were constructing next to it.
Source: New feed
Soil contamination prompted construction of a 7-km-long extension of Cairo Metro’s Line 3 on a viaduct instead of below ground, as first planned.
Source: New feed
Overcoming pandemic challenges, the team behind the largest highway improvement project on Tanzania’s Zanzibar archipelago completed work on time, below budget and with no reported COVID-19 cases in its workforce.
Source: New feed
Rwanda’s capital, Kigali, is called Africa’s Singapore for its beautiful scenery that attracts international tourists.
Source: New feed
Elements from abroad were critical to the $1.6-billion conversion of the James A. Farley Post Office building into the 255,000-sq-ft Train Hall at Penn Station.
Source: New feed