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Construction Managers





1 (—) $5,406.00Jacobs Engineering Group Inc.
1111 S. Arroyo Parkway, P.O. Box 7084
Pasadena, CA 91109-7084
(628) 578-3500
www.jacobs.com
Institutional buildings by this E/A/C represented 38 percent of volume, industrial buildings 12 percent and commercial buildings 1 percent, for a total of 51 percent of the constructed value of all types of projects for which Jacobs was a CM. Current projects include the new 600-bed Los Angeles County University of California Medical Center, and school construction programs in Omaha, Neb.; Washington, D.C.; and Pasadena, Texas. Noel Watson, Pres.; Warren Dean, VP
2 (1) $2,746.00Bovis Lend Lease
200 Park Ave.
New York, NY 10166
(212) 592-6800
www.bovislendlease.com
Projects under construction include Pentagon Row, a 1.5 million-sq.-ft. mixed-use development in Arlington, Va.; four buildings at the Takoma Park (Md.) campus of Montgomery College; $38 million of renovations and additions to the Brooklyn (N.Y.) Museum of Art; and a $44 million 911 center in New York City. Commercial buildings accounted for 64 percent of volume, institutional 24 percent and industrial 12 percent. Luther Cochrane, Chmn.; Charles Bacon, CEO
3 (10) $2,600.00McClier
401 E. Illinois St., Suite 625
Chicago, IL 60611
(312) 373-7700
www.mcclier.com
Current work of this employee-owned contractor and CM includes three aviation-related projects — a $3.5 billion expansion program at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, a 2.25 million-sq.-ft. American Airlines terminal redevelopment program at New York City's Kennedy International Airport and program management for LSG Sky-Chefs for flight kitchens at 90 domestic and 40 international locations. Grant McCullagh, Chmn., CEO; Thomas Rossiter, Pres.
4 (3) $2,233.78Gilbane Building Co.
7 Jackson Walkway
Providence, RI 02903
(401) 456-5800
www.gilbaneco.com
Gilbane is also listed in Contractors category. Agency CM projects represented 43 percent of firm's total volume.Sixty-six percent of volume was for institutional buildings, 21 percent for commercial buildings and 12 percent for industrial buildings. Current projects include new construction and renovation of buildings on two campuses of Foothill-DeAnza Community College in Los Altos Hills, Calif. Paul Choquette Jr., Chmn., CEO; Thomas Gilbane, Pres.
5 (2) $1,913.60URS Corp.
100 California St., Suite 500
San Francisco, CA 94111-4529
(415) 774-2700
www.urscorp.com
A 10-building construction and reconstruction program for the East Cleveland (Ohio) City Schools and two office towers at Greensboro Corporate Center in Tysons Corner, Va., are among current projects for this E/A/C/CM. Institutional buildings were 25 percent of volume, industrial buildings 12 percent and commercial buildings 9 percent. Reconstruction projects were 60 percent of volume. Martin Koffel, CEO; Martin Tanzer, EVP
6 (6) $1,639.68Tishman Construction Corp.
666 Fifth Ave.
New York, NY 10103
(212) 399-3604
www.tishman.com
Current projects include a $2 billion capital improvement program for the Chicago Public Schools, the redevelopment of Terminal A at Boston's Logan International Airport, the 2,000-room Borgata hotel/casino in Atlantic City and a number of telecom projects nationwide. Commercial buildings were 53 percent of volume, institutional buildings 26 percent and industrial buildings 17 percent. Daniel Tishman, Pres., East; Ronald Materick, Pres., West.
7 (5) $1,426.003D/International Inc.
1900 W. Loop St., Suite 400
Houston, TX 77027
(713) 871-7000
www.3DI.com
This A/E/CM is renovating schools in Baltimore and West Palm Beach, Fla.; performing work on $112 million of enhancements at Los Angeles International Airport; and renovating the Pentagon in Arlington, Va. Half of the company's work now involves educational buildings, ranging from kindergarten to university. Institutional buildings were 75 percent of volume, commercial buildings 20 percent and industrial buildings 5 percent. Charles Thomsen, Chmn.; John Murph, Pres.
8 (9) $868.00Hunt Construction Group
2450 S. Tibbs Ave.
Indianapolis, IN 46241
(317) 227-7800
www.huntconstructiongroup.com
The former Huber, Hunt & Nichols Inc., a contractor and CM, is involved in projects that include the 43,000-seat Miller Park, home field for baseball's Milwaukee Brewers; the 65,000-sq.-ft. Pittsburgh Steelers stadium; and the $59 million Marriott Convention Center Hotel in Indianapolis. Offices are located in Tampa, Fla.; Branchburg, N.J.; Orlando, Fla.; Phoenix; and Dallas. CM projects accounted for 62 percent of total revenues. R.G. Hunt, CEO; Michael Kerr, Pres.
9 (—) $764.46J.A. Jones Inc.
J.A. Jones Drive
Charlotte, NC 28287
(704) 553-3000
www.jajones.com
Current assignments for this CM and contractor include the $600 million, 1 million-sq.-ft. Global Gateway project for Continental Airlines at Newark International Airport, scheduled for completion in early 2002, and 515 Park Ave., a $66 million, 43-story residential tower in New York City that was completed last fall. Alfred Neffgen became president in December 2000. Alfred Neffgen, Pres., CEO; Bruce Dell, VP, Bus. Dev.
10 (—) $705.22Skanska
16-16 Whitestone Expressway
Whitestone, NY 11357
(718) 767-2600
www.skanskausa.com
Also listed in the Contractors category, Skanska acquired Baugh Inc. of Seattle and Barclay White of Blue Bell, Pa., and entered new telecommunication ventures. Current projects include the $386 million Delta Airlines terminal at Boston's Logan International Airport. The company is a subsidiary of publicly held Skanska AB, headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden. Stuart Graham, CEO; Hans Andersson, VP

 

Facts for thought

The 10 largest construction managers were involved in the placement of $20.3 billion of commercial, institutional and industrial buildings. The average CM giant managed $2.03 billion of put-in-place building construction, of which 35 percent was institutional, 30 percent was commercial and 19 percent was industrial. Reconstruction was a significant factor for the largest CMs, representing 26 percent of the average giant's volume. Federal projects were 18 percent of the average giant's work, and state and local projects were 13 percent of volume. Airport and school construction programs were among the most prominent types of projects.


  

© 2008, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.




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