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The Top 400 Contractors Sourcebook 2006
ENR’s Top 400 Contractors Sourcebook includes market analysis and rankings of the largest U.S.-based architectural and engineering firms in major industry sectors: general building, transportation, manufacturing, industrial process, petroleum, power, environmental and telecommunications. The sourcebook also ranks contractors in specific project types, such as health care, highways and pharmaceuticals. The cover story is, “It Is the Best of Times for Well-Managed Firms.” The main tables are: The Top 400 Contractors; The 2006 Top 400 at a Glance: volume, profitability, professional staff, backlog, market analysis, international regions; The Top 100 Contractors by New Contracts. Also included is a bar chart illustrating "Top 400 Contractor Trends in market Sectors Over Past Four Years": Building, Manufacturing, Industrial, Petroleum, Power, Transportation, Water, Sewer/Waste, Hazardous Waste, Telecommunications. The publication includes a directory containing the address, the name of the president or CEO and the telephone number for each of the Top 400 Contractors.
ENR
enr.com October 2006 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � 5
Top 400 Contractors
Fgeographic regions. What soft spots that can be found are notcatastrophic. And there is little evidence of a major downturnin the immediate future. This has led many firms to enjoyrecord years. It also has led to major contractors to take a closelook at their businesses to make sure they can handle the pros-perity.
The scale of the boom can be seen from the revenue figuressubmitted by ENR’s Top 400 Contractors. The Top 400 post-ed a combined revenue of $235.56 billion for 2005, a hefty12.3% above 2004’s mark of $209.74 billion. This bounty wasshared between the domestic and international markets, withdomestic revenue rising 13.0% to $199.97 billion while interna-tional revenue rose 8.4% to $35.59 billion.
For many firms, this is the best market they’ve ever seen.“There’s at least enough work out there for everyone,” saysMike Bolen, CEO of McCarthy Building Cos. “It truly is thebest of times.” Mervyn Sambles, vice president of strategicdevelopment for Fluor Corp., agrees. “I’ve been in the businessfor 30 years, and this is the best I’ve seen the markets. Some ofour senior managers say this is like it was in the late 1960s.”
“Last year was our third straight year of record revenue,”
For many, if not most, large generalcontractors, this is a time like fewhave ever seen. The economy isstrong, the markets vibrant, and thereis more than enough work to goaround in most major markets and
says Jude Laspa, deputy chief operating officer at Bechtel. “It’snice to have that level of backlog. It gives employees confidenceabout the future.” Greg Nook, executive vice president of J.E.Dunn Construction, agrees. “There are good fundamentals inplace for a solid market for the foreseeable future. It also meanshope for some markets that have been quiet.”
For some firms, growth has been explosive. The biggestjump on the Top 400 was by Alvin H. Butz Inc., which nearlytripled in size. “We acquired Shoemaker Construction Co. andAlexander Building Construction in 2004, but that didn’taccount for our increase,” says Robert Episcopo, business devel-opment director. Several major projects and an overall redevel-opment boom in Pennsylvania’s Lehigh Valley and in Philadel-phia boosted the firm’s revenue. Butz currently is finishing anew $85-million headquarters facility for Olympus America inCenter Valley, Pa., just south of Bethlehem, and ShoemakerConstruction is finishing the $100-million Waterfront Squareproject—two luxury high-rise condominiums on the DelawareRiver in Philadelphia.
Butz also is expanding to Florida almost by accident. “Wehad a senior manager retire down to the Naples area, and hetold us of the huge opportunities down there,” Episcopo says.After a few false starts, Butz teamed with a local firm to form ajoint-venture company, Gates-McVey-Butz Institutional Con-struction, to work in the schools market. “We’ve managed tobook $129 million in work in schools, condo conversions andretail in less than a year,” Episcopo says.
Three BearsFor some firms, the market is strong, but not overheated. “Inthe Pacific Northwest, we have a ‘Three Bears’ market,” says
Bart Eberwein, vice president of marketing for Hoffman Con-struction. “It’s not too hot. It’s not too cold. It’s just right.”
He notes that there were some bad years after 9/11, butthat corporate spending now is rising. “We are seeing a
lot of work in medical, lab facilities and researchfacilities. The American economy is strong, so
everyone seems to be building labs andresearch-and-development facilities,” he
says.A significant market trend is urban
revitalization, which is showing upacross the country, particularly in the
The Top
400CONTRACTORS
It Is the Best of TimesFor Well-Managed Firms
By Gary Tulacz
ENR
6 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � October 2006 enr.com
Top 400 Contractors
Rust Belt states. “We are seeing a lot of mixed use in urbandowntowns,” says Mike Kolakowski, CEO of Konover Con-struction, which works in New England and Middle-Atlanticstates. “It seems like this is the program of choice for redevel-oping cities.”
One city that is working hard on redevelopment is St. Louis.“We are seeing a major demographic shift toward living in thecities,” says Joe McKee, president of Paric Corp. He says thatthe price of gas is only one factor in people deciding to tradethe life of the suburban commuter for city dweller. “It’s also amove toward an alternative lifestyle where people want to benear shopping and cultural facilities,” he says.
Another area undergoing revitalization is eastern Pennsylva-nia. “Philadelphia is working to revitalize its downtown with alot of new residential towers,” says Episcopo. Allentown also isundergoing a major redevelopment, he says. Part of that rede-velopment is the construction of a new Triple-A baseball parkdesigned by HOK, with Alvin H. Butz as construction manag-er, Episcopo says.
But there is a cloud on the horizon. The question of urbandevelopment has become a hot political issue after the U.S.Supreme Court ruled last June in Kelo v. City of New London that
local governments could use eminent domain to condemn agingstructures and neighborhoods to make way for private develop-ment. “You are seeing anti-growth groups using this ruling tofuel the debate against urban redevelopment,” says McKee.
McKee notes that Missouri on May 5 passed a law barringthe use of eminent domain solely for economic developmentpurposes at the urging of Gov. Matt Blunt (R), who plans to signit. McKee says there also is a petition for a ballot initiative toput an even more restrictive requirement in the state constitu-tion. Illinois already bans using eminent domain for privateeconomic development.
On the Road AgainOn the infrastructure side, some down markets are beginningto percolate again. “California’s budget crunch of the past fewyears depressed the market for infrastructure, but we are seeingmore projects come on line,” says Michael Crawford, CEO ofSukut Construction. Part of that is the continuing migration tothe state. “We also do a lot of landfill work, and with all the newpeople settling here, that means a lot more trash,” Crawfordsays.
For highway contractors, the passage of the long-awaited
The 2006 Top 400 at a Glance
Market AnalysisREVENUE PERCENT
TYPE OF WORK $ MIL. OF TOTAL
BUILDING 131,137.6 55.7
MANUFACTURING 6,013.4 2.6
INDUSTRIAL 10,357.6 4.4
PETROLEUM 17,270.5 7.3
WATER 4,392.3 1.9
SEWER WASTE 4,475.8 1.9
TRANSPORTATION 30,308.7 12.9
HAZARDOUS WASTE 7,193.6 3.1
POWER 10,938.5 4.6
TELECOMMUNICATIONS 3,216.9 1.4
OTHER 10,256.9 4.4
International RegionsNUMBER REVENUE PERCENTOF FIRMS $ MIL. OF TOTAL
CANADA 36 4,815.2 13.5
LATIN AMERICA 29 2,333.4 6.6
CARIBBEAN ISLANDS 29 919.7 2.6
EUROPE 31 10,659.1 30.0
MIDDLE EAST 24 11,161.4 31.4
ASIA/AUSTRALIA 27 3,263.7 9.2
AFRICA 18 2,394.8 6.7
ANTARCTIC/ARCTIC 1 41.3 0.1
VolumeDOMESTIC INTERNATIONAL TOTAL
$ BIL. % CHG. $ BIL. % CHG. $ BIL. % CHG.
REVENUE 200.0 +13.0 35.6 +8.4 235.6 +12.3
NEW CONTRACTS 230.2 +19.3 39.0 +24.3 269.2 +20.0
ProfitabilityNUMBER OF FIRMS REPORTING AVERAGE % OF
PROFIT LOSS PROFIT LOSS
DOMESTIC 332 22 3.5 NA
INTERNATIONAL 46 21 11.0 NA
Professional StaffNUMBER OF FIRMS REPORTING AVERAGE % OF
DOMESTIC INTL. DOMESTIC INTL.
INCREASE 233 27 12.8 29.2
DECREASE 20 5 41.1 NA
SAME 118 63 NA NA
BacklogNUMBER OF FIRMS REPORTING AVERAGE %
HIGHER 262 40.8
LOWER 44 14.9
SAME 60 NA
ENR
enr.com October 2006 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � 9
Top 400 Contractors
federal highway funding bill last year wasmore a relief than a cause of celebration.“As the bill was being bandied about byCongress, the states simply went aheadwith a lot of their plans,” says Joe Prego,vice president of American Infrastruc-ture. The problem in waiting so long isinflation has taken a toll on plans. “TheDOTs are not getting the repaving milesthey thought they would because of theincreases in asphalt prices,” he says.
American Infrastructure has madesome recent moves to blunt price increas-es and improve schedules. “We recentlyadded to the aggregate side of the busi-ness toward becoming a fully integratedfirm, offering both materials supply andcontracting,” Prego says.
Many heavy contractors are watchingrecent private investments in road proj-ects with interest. “These firms come inwith foreign money, but when it comes tothe execution of the project, they’regoing to find local partners,” says Prego.The major difference is that highwaycontractors will be working for private,corporate partners rather than govern-ment agencies, he says. “The risks will begreater, but so would be the potentialrewards.”
“You are seeing foreign firms like[Spain’s] Ferrovial, ACS, and CINTRAdeciding that the U.S. is an attractivemarket,” says Sambles of Fluor. Butdespite the initial high-profile jobsawarded to these firms, he doesn’t knowif this will continue to create a lot of newwork. “I think in the future there will bemore emphasis on buying existing infra-structure systems, rather than buildingnew ones,” he says.
Some heavy and highway contractorsin California may fall victim to that state’saggressive environmental regulations.“There are negotiations in Sacramentoover [proposals] for requiring heavyequipment to have Tier I engines,” saysCrawford of Sukut. Right now, thedebate is not over whether to requireengine replacement, but how much timeshould contractors be given to comply.He says that Sukut, like many large heavycontractors in the state, already are mak-
The Top 100 Contractors by New Contracts*2005 2005
RANK FIRM CONTRACTS† RANK FIRM CONTRACTS†
1 BECHTEL 14,928.0
2 CENTEX 13,932.4
3 FLUOR CORP. 12,517.0
4 PERINI CORP. 8,480.0
5 THE TURNER CORP. 8,244.9
6 JACOBS 7,648.8
7 BOVIS LEND LEASE 7,009.7
8 SKANSKA USA INC. 4,869.9
9 KIEWIT CORP. 4,389.0
10 PCL CONSTRUCTION ENTERPRISES INC. 4,368.0
11 KBR 4,227.8
12 THE WHITING-TURNER CONTRACTING CO. 4,200.0
13 CB&I 3,279.0
14 SWINERTON INC. 3,274.0
15 THE WALSH GROUP LTD. 3,052.0
16 STRUCTURE TONE INC. 3,026.0
17 GILBANE BUILDING CO. 3,012.3
18 FOSTER WHEELER LTD. 2,872.0
19 CLARK GROUP 2,680.0
20 J.E. DUNN CONSTRUCTION GROUP 2,566.0
21 WASHINGTON GROUP INTERNATIONAL 2,524.0
22 THE YATES COS. INC. 2,351.3
23 MCCARTHY BUILDING COS. INC. 2,319.0
24 BRASFIELD & GORRIE LLC 2,266.4
25 GRANITE CONSTRUCTION INC. 2,180.9
26 BLACK & VEATCH 2,134.9
27 APAC 2,081.7
28 OPUS GROUP 2,064.0
29 HENSEL PHELPS CONSTRUCTION CO. 2,029.4
30 WEBCOR BUILDERS 1,931.8
31 DPR CONSTRUCTION INC. 1,840.0
32 HOFFMAN CORP. 1,800.0
33 HUNT CONSTRUCTION GROUP INC. 1,750.0
34 BARTON MALOW CO. 1,600.0
35 TIC HOLDINGS INC. 1,485.2
36 BE&K INC. 1,450.0
37 AUSTIN INDUSTRIES 1,399.6
38 THE WEITZ CO. LLC 1,391.6
39 SUFFOLK CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 1,366.2
40 TUTOR-SALIBA CORP. 1,272.0
41 M.A. MORTENSON CO. 1,256.8
42 DAY & ZIMMERMANN GROUP 1,244.0
43 ALBERICI CORP. 1,136.4
44 MANHATTAN CONSTRUCTION CO. 1,100.1
45 THE FLINTCO COS. INC. 965.0
46 WALBRIDGE ALDINGER 964.0
47 PARSONS 955.9
48 ZACHRY CONSTRUCTION CORP. 934.8
49 KRAUS-ANDERSON CONSTRUCTION CO. 929.0
50 RYAN COS. US INC. 901.7
51 PEPPER CONSTRUCTION GROUP 891.4
52 KRAFT CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 869.7
53 MOSS & ASSOCIATES LLC 852.2
54 SUNDT CONSTRUCTION INC. 828.0
55 HOLDER CONSTRUCTION CO. 800.4
56 THE LANE CONSTRUCTION CORP. 773.0
57 LAUTH GROUP INC. 751.5
58 HRH CONSTRUCTION LLC 750.0
59 DUKE CONSTRUCTION 748.0
60 HOWARD S. WRIGHT CONSTRUCTION CO. 746.0
61 DOUGLAS E. BARNHART INC. 732.8
62 ABB LUMMUS GLOBAL 698.7
63 WALTON CONSTRUCTION CO. LLC 695.0
64 CLAYCO 691.0
65 EARTH TECH INC. 684.0
66 PANATTONI CONSTRUCTION INC. 665.3
67 THE BECK GROUP 646.0
68 HITT CONTRACTING INC. 634.4
69 FLATIRON CONSTRUCTION 633.0
70 CHOATE CONSTRUCTION CO. 632.3
71 KITCHELL CORP. 620.5
72 HAWAIIAN DREDGING CONSTR. CO. INC. 620.0
73 HATHAWAY DINWIDDIE CONSTRUCTION 612.0
74 L.F. DRISCOLL CO. 606.0
75 TEICHERT CONSTRUCTION 601.0
76 DEVCON CONSTRUCTION INC. 600.0
77 VCC 600.0
78 MESSER CONSTRUCTION 599.6
79 KOKOSING CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 594.2
80 LAYNE CHRISTENSEN CO. 593.7
81 JAMES MCHUGH CONSTRUCTION CO. 592.6
82 FAGEN INC. 590.0
83 FRU-CON CONSTRUCTION CORP. 586.6
84 THE ROBINS & MORTON GROUP 584.3
85 ROEL CONSTRUCTION CO. 580.0
86 HOAR CONSTRUCTION LLC 577.3
87 MCGOUGH COS. 571.0
88 THE HASKELL CO. 567.0
89 INSITUFORM TECHNOLOGIES 556.0
90 AKER KVAERNER 554.8
91 MATRIX SERVICE CO. 553.5
92 ADD INC. 550.0
93 CORE CONSTRUCTION GROUP 543.7
94 KEATING BUILDING CORP. 543.3
95 ODEBRECHT CONSTRUCTION INC. 540.0
96 ADOLFSON & PETERSON CONSTRUCTION 534.0
97 O’NEIL INDUSTRIES INC. 534.0
98 BARR & BARR INC. 531.3
99 HUNT BUILDING CO. LTD. 524.0
100 WEIS BUILDERS INC. 523.3
*AMONG TOP 400 FIRMS PROVIDING CONTRACT DATA; †=IN $ MIL.
ENR
10 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � October 2006 enr.com
Top 400 Contractors
says Laspa. Bechtel is working on the 1,230-MW coal-fired ElmRoad plant in Wisconsin, a 400-MW expansion of theSpringerville coal-fired plant in Arizona and is prequalified forthe TXU program, he says.
The Price Isn’t RightThe biggest concern among contractors is the escalation of theprice of materials and labor. “We all got comfortable with lowcommodity prices for so many years, but that comfort zone isgone,” says McKee of Paric.
For some, the dramatic rise in some commodity prices ispuzzling. “Part of it is demand-based, with economies in nationsaround the world healthy or even buoyant,” says Sambles. Thisis leading to pricing pressure. “But I don’t know of anyone whocan make out an economic justification for [the high price] ofcopper.” Sambles thinks that commodities speculation may beadding to some price increases.
Few contractors face a bigger problem with prices than theheavy contractors. “We use about 10 million gallons of diesel ayear,” says Crawford of Sukut. “We’re all living in fear of priceescalations and bid accordingly.”
Getting customers to accept materials price increases is partof the problem. “You put in bids on highway jobs that are wayover the engineers’ estimates that were prepared months oryears before and the public thinks the contractors are trying torip them off,” Prego says. Materials costs have also caused stick-er shock among owners. “The developers that don’t build oftenmight decide not to proceed when they realize how prices haveincreased,” says Slade Opheikens, operations vice president ofR&O Construction. Many will likely scale back projects. Anowner “might want an expansion and find it now costs $100 sqft more than what they paid a couple years ago,” says Bolen. �
ing the move to cleaner engines. “But the smaller firms thatdon’t have the capital to make the change could find themselvesin big trouble,” he says.
Power PlaysThe domestic industrial process and petroleum markets havebeen sluggish for years, but that is changing with increases incommodity prices. “Companies in the oil and gas exploration,refining, and transmission and mining and minerals industriesare all committing major new money to their capital budgets totake advantage of product higher prices,” says David Layton,CEO of The Layton Cos.
On the petroleum side, there is a new focus. “With the priceof oil so high, refining capital programs are shifting from clean-fuels projects to adding and upgrading capacity,” says Sambles.Refinery programs also are focusing on refining the heavy, high-sulfur and highly acidic crude coming out of the Middle East.“These jobs are $500 million to $1 billion each,” he says.
The up-and-down domestic power market may be bouncingback. After a huge buildup in capacity from gas-fired power-plants in the late 1990s, the market went into a swoon. “But weare seeing many areas of the country eating away at the capac-ity reserve,” says Sambles. He notes that there is a new movetoward coal-fired plants, with a focus on cleaner-burning coalplants outfitted with emissions-reducing systems, that may sooncome off the drawing board. For example, Dallas-based TXUCorp. announced on April 20 that it would build 11 coal-firedunits at nine existing plants to generate 8,600 MW new energyin Texas over the next four years. The price tag is $10 billion.
For Bechtel, the move to coal-fired plants plays to itsstrength. “Coal-fired plants are much more complex than gas-fired plants, and we have a long history in clean-coal programs,”
TOP 400 CONTRACTOR TRENDS IN MARKET SECTORS OVER PAST FOUR YEARS
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SEWER/WASTE$ Bil.
POWER$ Bil.
TELECOMMUNICATIONS$ Bil.
12
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MANUFACTURING$ Bil.20
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INDUSTRIAL$ Bil.
WATER$ Bil. HAZARDOUS WASTE$ Bil.
PETROLEUM$ Bil.
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
TRANSPORTATION$ Bil.
Source: ENR
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The
Top
400
Cont
ract
ors
2005
MAR
KETS
(% O
F 20
05 R
EVEN
UE)
RANK
REVE
NUE
NEW
GEN.
WTR
./SW
R.
INDU
S./
HAZ.
TELE
-CM
-AT-
RISK
2006
2005
FIRM
TOTA
LIN
TL.
CONT
RACT
SBL
DG.
MFG
.PO
WER
WAS
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TRO.
TRAN
SP.
WAS
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MM
.%
OF
REV.
ENR
enr.com October 2006 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � 15
The Top 400 Contractors2005 MARKETS (% OF 2005 REVENUE)
RANK REVENUE NEW GEN. WTR./SWR. INDUS./ HAZ. TELE- CM-AT-RISK2006 2005 FIRM TOTAL INTL. CONTRACTS BLDG. MFG. POWER WASTE PETRO. TRANSP. WASTE COMM. % OF REV.
51 88 RYAN COS. US INC., Minneapolis, Minn. 755.0 0.0 901.7 99 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 24
52 72 BLACK & VEATCH, Overland Park, Kan. 739.9 256.9 2,134.9 0 0 64 23 9 0 0 4 1
53 51 VALLEYCREST COS., Calabasas, Calif.† 730.0 0.0 NA 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
54 57 DUKE CONSTRUCTION, Indianapolis, Ind. 725.0 0.0 748.0 96 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0
55 46 DICK CONSTRUCTION CO., Pittsburgh, Pa.† 698.0 49.0 500.0 88 0 0 1 0 9 2 0 0
56 98 WALTON CONSTRUCTION CO. LLC, Kansas City, Mo. 673.0 0.0 695.0 99 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3
57 59 HOLDER CONSTRUCTION CO., Atlanta, Ga. 672.4 0.0 800.4 37 0 0 0 0 0 0 63 91
58 55 THE FLINTCO COS. INC., Tulsa, Okla.† 654.0 0.0 965.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 74
59 68 BALFOUR BEATTY CONSTRUCTION INC., Atlanta, Ga.† 653.0 0.0 341.0 0 0 0 5 0 95 0 0 0
60 49 FRU-CON CONSTRUCTION CORP., St. Louis, Mo.† 639.5 0.0 586.6 41 0 2 14 28 15 0 0 36
61 63 TEICHERT CONSTRUCTION, Sacramento, Calif. 625.0 0.0 601.0 72 0 0 8 0 19 0 0 0
62 66 TUTOR-SALIBA CORP., Sylmar, Calif.† 620.0 47.0 1,272.0 43 0 0 0 0 57 0 0 0
63 71 AMEC AMERICAS, Washington, D.C.† 618.0 269.0 NA 31 0 4 24 32 8 0 0 20
64 61 SUNDT CONSTRUCTION INC., Tempe, Ariz. 614.8 0.0 828.0 68 0 0 13 0 13 0 6 77
65 62 DAY & ZIMMERMANN GROUP, Philadelphia, Pa.† 598.0 64.0 1,244.0 22 0 72 0 6 0 0 0 0
66 79 DEVCON CONSTRUCTION INC., Milpitas, Calif. 590.0 0.0 600.0 83 17 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
67 70 INSITUFORM TECHNOLOGIES, Chesterfield, Mo. 582.0 118.0 556.0 0 0 0 93 7 0 0 0 0
68 38 MARNELL CORRAO ASSOC., Las Vegas, Nev.† 580.4 0.0 420.1 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
69 85 THE BOLDT CO., Appleton, Wis. 579.9 0.0 466.0 70 5 12 4 5 4 0 0 40
70 73 BBL CONSTRUCTION SERVICES LLC, Albany, N.Y.† 577.5 0.0 321.1 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 41
71 272 LAYNE CHRISTENSEN CO., Mission Woods, Kan.† 572.6 96.6 593.7 0 0 0 70 6 0 2 0 0
72 53 THE BECK GROUP, Dallas, Texas† 569.4 38.8 646.0 96 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 45
73 102 WILLIAMS BROTHERS CONSTRUCTION CO., Houston, Texas 567.9 0.0 515.0 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
74 67 KOKOSING CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Fredericktown, Ohio† 564.0 3.0 594.2 19 1 0 15 11 48 0 0 0
75 133 PANATTONI CONSTRUCTION INC., Sacramento, Calif. 557.8 0.0 665.3 97 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0
76 54 EARTH TECH INC., Long Beach, Calif. 553.0 311.0 684.0 10 0 0 75 0 0 15 0 14
77 87 THE LAYTON COS., Sandy, Utah† 550.8 0.0 435.1 63 4 2 6 6 9 0 8 61
78 90 JAMES G. DAVIS CONSTRUCTION CORP., Rockville, Md. 550.7 0.0 489.1 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
79 65 THE HASKELL CO., Jacksonville, Fla. 544.3 30.0 567.0 29 25 0 13 25 8 0 0 17
80 95 WEIS BUILDERS INC., Minneapolis, Minn. 542.1 0.0 523.3 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 35
81 58 HITT CONTRACTING INC., Fairfax, Va. 528.7 11.7 634.4 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100
82 74 HRH CONSTRUCTION LLC, White Plains, N.Y. 528.0 0.0 750.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 68
83 82 HOWARD S. WRIGHT CONSTRUCTION CO., Seattle, Wash. 526.5 0.0 746.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 58
84 75 POWER CONSTRUCTION CO., Schaumburg, Ill. 515.0 0.0 497.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100
85 94 VCC, Little Rock, Ark. 510.0 0.0 600.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
86 103 AKER KVAERNER, Houston, Texas† 506.4 49.3 554.8 0 0 49 0 51 0 0 0 6
87 77 O’NEIL INDUSTRIES INC., Chicago, Ill.† 502.0 0.0 534.0 91 8 0 0 0 1 0 0 69
88 89 KITCHELL CORP., Phoenix, Ariz.† 499.3 0.0 620.5 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100
89 86 SHAWMUT DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION, Boston, Mass.† 497.8 1.6 479.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100
90 84 DOUGLAS E. BARNHART INC., San Diego, Calif.† 486.4 0.0 732.8 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
91 80 AMES CONSTRUCTION INC., Burnsville, Minn. 484.4 0.0 327.1 12 0 0 11 21 55 0 0 0
92 100 MESSER CONSTRUCTION, Cincinnati, Ohio 483.7 0.0 599.6 97 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 40
93 113 KRAFT CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Naples, Fla.† 481.2 0.0 869.7 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100
94 106 CORE CONSTRUCTION GROUP, Morton, Ill.† 474.7 0.0 543.7 97 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 16
95 105 MICHELS CORP., Brownsville, Wis.† 472.8 21.2 472.8 0 14 15 5 32 7 0 14 0
96 107 CLAYCO, St. Louis, Mo. 471.0 0.0 691.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
97 78 ADOLFSON & PETERSON CONSTRUCTION, Minneapolis, Minn. 470.0 0.0 534.0 93 0 0 5 0 1 0 0 43
98 99 MCGOUGH COS., St. Paul, Minn.† 465.0 0.0 571.0 91 0 0 0 2 0 0 7 36
99 119 CHOATE CONSTRUCTION CO., Atlanta, Ga. 461.7 0.0 632.3 89 2 0 0 6 0 0 3 53
100 83 ABB LUMMUS GLOBAL, Bloomfield, N.J.† 459.1 448.3 698.7 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0 0
ENR
16 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � October 2006 enr.com
The Top 400 Contractors2005 MARKETS (% OF 2005 REVENUE)
RANK REVENUE NEW GEN. WTR./SWR. INDUS./ HAZ. TELE- CM-AT-RISK2006 2005 FIRM TOTAL INTL. CONTRACTS BLDG. MFG. POWER WASTE PETRO. TRANSP. WASTE COMM. % OF REV.
101 142 JAMES MCHUGH CONSTRUCTION CO., Chicago, Ill. 445.1 0.0 592.6 87 0 0 0 0 13 0 0 0
102 56 MATRIX SERVICE CO., Tulsa, Okla.† 439.1 5.6 553.5 0 1 14 3 81 0 0 0 0
103 92 P.J. DICK-TRUMBULL-LINDY, West Mifflin, Pa.† 435.0 0.0 355.0 48 0 0 1 0 49 0 0 8
104 122 HAWAIIAN DREDGING CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Honolulu, Hawaii 434.0 0.0 620.0 78 0 1 2 0 17 0 3 0
105 97 TORCON INC., Westfield, N.J. 425.0 51.0 434.0 46 0 0 0 42 12 0 0 100
106 134 THE ROBINS & MORTON GROUP, Birmingham, Ala. 418.0 0.0 584.3 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
107 108 PRIMORIS CORP., Lake Forest, Calif.† 417.9 55.4 417.9 11 0 22 18 49 0 0 0 0
108 128 PIZZAGALLI CONSTRUCTION, S. Burlington, Vt. 412.0 0.0 400.0 37 13 1 47 0 3 0 0 33
109 319 HBE CORP., St. Louis, Mo. 410.0 0.0 NA 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
110 145 HUNT BUILDING CO. LTD., El Paso, Texas 409.0 0.0 524.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
111 112 AMERICAN INFRASTRUCTURE INC., Worcester, Pa.† 408.8 0.0 416.2 0 0 0 35 0 65 0 0 0
112 121 L.F. DRISCOLL CO., Bala Cynwyd, Pa. 408.0 0.0 606.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100
113 131 DAVID E. HARVEY BUILDERS INC., Houston, Texas 408.0 0.0 177.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
114 91 THE HUBBARD GROUP, Winter Park, Fla.† 405.6 0.0 383.9 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
115 96 EMJ CORP., Chattanooga, Tenn. 403.1 0.0 361.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
116 101 THE STELLAR GROUP, Jacksonville, Fla.† 401.2 65.9 420.0 18 0 19 0 62 0 0 0 0
117 124 CLANCY & THEYS CONSTRUCTION CO., Raleigh, N.C. 400.8 0.0 404.0 95 1 0 0 1 3 0 0 49
118 136 FAGEN INC., Granite Falls, Minn. 397.3 0.0 590.0 0 0 0 0 99 0 0 0 0
119 144 THE MCSHANE COS., Rosemont, Ill.† 394.7 0.0 413.8 87 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 7
120 130 GRAYCOR, Homewood, Ill.† 392.0 48.0 384.0 33 39 5 0 23 0 0 0 9
121 172 H+M CO. INC., Jackson, Tenn.† 389.3 0.0 420.0 73 3 10 0 14 0 0 0 48
122 64 KAJIMA CONSTRUCTION SERVICES, Atlanta, Ga. 380.0 0.0 140.0 93 6 0 0 1 0 0 0 90
123 159 OKLAND CONSTRUCTION, Salt Lake City, Utah 379.0 0.0 356.2 93 0 0 0 3 3 0 1 75
124 165 CSI CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Colorado Springs, Colo. 378.1 0.0 345.7 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
125 118 BERNARDS, San Fernando, Calif. 378.0 0.0 343.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 48
126 109 GRAY CONSTRUCTION, Lexington, Ky.† 377.3 0.0 488.3 58 34 3 0 4 1 0 0 4
127 120 GREAT LAKES DREDGE & DOCK CORP. LLC, Oak Brook, Ill.† 374.2 47.2 321.0 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
128 116 FLATIRON CONSTRUCTION, Longmont, Colo.† 374.0 3.0 633.0 0 0 0 4 0 95 0 0 0
129 140 B.L. HARBERT INTERNATIONAL, Birmingham, Ala. 371.0 104.0 459.0 84 3 0 14 0 0 0 0 37
130 123 MIRON CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Neenah, Wis. 368.1 0.0 472.1 79 0 9 1 11 0 0 0 0
131 365 BUTZ ENTERPRISES INC., Allentown, Pa.† 360.6 0.0 348.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 88
132 132 KENNY CONSTRUCTION, Wheeling, Ill.† 360.0 0.0 351.0 31 0 36 3 0 3 0 0 0
133 115 THE ALTER GROUP, Skokie, Ill.† 359.4 0.0 NA 70 30 0 0 0 0 0 0 13
134 104 CDI CONTRACTORS LLC, Little Rock, Ark. 359.0 0.0 500.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
135 137 ANGELO IAFRATE COS., Warren, Mich.† 357.0 0.0 478.0 0 17 0 8 20 54 0 0 0
136 189 BATSON-COOK CO., West Point, Ga. 356.9 0.0 397.6 99 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 13
137 198 WEEKS MARINE INC., Cranford, N.J.† 356.7 9.5 397.8 0 0 0 0 3 92 0 0 0
138 210 BOH BROS. CONSTRUCTION CO. LLC, New Orleans, La. 356.0 0.0 269.5 8 0 0 10 8 63 0 0 0
139 173 JACOBSEN CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Salt Lake City, Utah† 355.0 0.0 340.4 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 90
140 148 CONTRACK INTERNATIONAL, Arlington, Va. 354.7 354.7 356.3 71 0 0 1 0 23 0 0 0
141 187 INDUSTRIAL CONTRACTORS INC., Evansville, Ind.† 353.9 0.0 279.5 30 4 32 0 33 0 0 0 20
142 176 SELLEN CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Seattle, Wash. 351.0 0.0 377.4 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
143 126 VECELLIO GROUP INC., West Palm Beach, Fla.† 351.0 0.0 360.0 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
144 93 BURNS & MCDONNELL, Kansas City, Mo. 350.8 6.4 NA 7 7 21 3 56 6 0 0 0
145 114 HOAR CONSTRUCTION LLC, Birmingham, Ala. 350.6 0.0 577.3 99 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 95
146 135 CHANEN CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Phoenix, Ariz. 347.2 0.0 347.2 95 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
147 154 C.W. DRIVER, Pasadena, Calif. 345.5 0.0 410.0 88 0 0 0 12 0 0 0 86
148 182 CROSSLAND CONSTRUCTION CO., Columbus, Kan.† 344.2 0.0 NA 92 3 0 4 1 0 0 0 11
149 191 HATHAWAY DINWIDDIE CONSTRUCTION, San Francisco, Calif. 341.8 0.0 612.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
150 ** THE ATLANTIC GROUP, Norfolk, Va.† 335.0 8.9 280.0 0 0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0
ENR
18 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � October 2006 enr.com
The Top 400 Contractors2005 MARKETS (% OF 2005 REVENUE)
RANK REVENUE NEW GEN. WTR./SWR. INDUS./ HAZ. TELE- CM-AT-RISK2006 2005 FIRM TOTAL INTL. CONTRACTS BLDG. MFG. POWER WASTE PETRO. TRANSP. WASTE COMM. % OF REV.
151 233 ROY ANDERSON CORP., Gulfport, Miss.† 334.3 0.0 284.7 96 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 3
152 117 F.A. WILHELM CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Indianapolis, Ind.† 333.5 0.0 250.0 43 2 4 0 49 1 0 0 75
153 129 BRICE BUILDING CO. INC., Birmingham, Ala. 332.0 0.0 232.6 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
154 162 S.J. AMOROSO CONSTRUCTION, Redwood Shores, Calif. 329.0 0.0 NA 96 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0
155 190 LPCIMINELLI INC., Buffalo, N.Y.† 327.3 0.0 272.0 98 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 8
156 127 KEATING BUILDING CORP., Philadelphia, Pa. 323.7 0.0 543.3 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 75
157 153 MARTIN-HARRIS CONSTRUCTION, Las Vegas, Nev.† 321.1 0.0 433.0 96 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 5
158 155 BIG-D CORP., Salt Lake City, Utah 320.0 0.0 506.0 78 5 0 0 18 0 0 0 47
159 242 THE PENTA BUILDING GROUP INC., Las Vegas, Nev. 318.2 0.0 279.6 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
160 170 C.F. JORDAN INVESTMENTS LLP, El Paso, Texas† 317.9 0.0 140.8 90 0 0 1 0 9 0 0 4
161 ** MOSS & ASSOCIATES LLC, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. 317.7 0.0 852.2 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 56
162 194 CADDELL CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Montgomery, Ala. 314.0 167.7 377.2 88 0 1 0 0 7 0 0 0
163 186 JOHN S. CLARK CO. LLC, Mt. Airy, N.C.† 313.7 4.5 247.0 84 16 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
164 152 S.D. DEACON CORP., Citrus Heights, Calif.† 312.4 0.0 338.7 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
165 149 BARNHILL CONTRACTING CO., Tarboro, N.C. 312.0 0.0 365.2 26 0 0 0 0 74 0 0 9
166 143 THE RUDOLPH/LIBBE COS. INC., Walbridge, Ohio† 310.3 0.0 257.5 23 54 4 6 10 0 0 1 5
167 160 KONOVER CONSTRUCTION CORP., Farmington, Conn. 310.2 0.0 NA 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30
168 214 MORGANTI GROUP INC., Danbury, Conn. 304.3 243.4 232.9 42 0 0 58 0 0 0 0 6
169 111 W.M. JORDAN CO. INC., Newport News, Va.† 301.7 0.0 438.0 93 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 68
170 192 FRED WEBER INC., Maryland Heights, Mo. 300.5 0.0 NA 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
171 171 CIANBRO CORP., Pittsfield, Maine 300.0 0.0 135.2 9 8 24 6 11 32 7 0 1
172 168 NABHOLZ CONSTRUCTION CORP., Conway, Ark. 299.0 0.0 364.5 66 10 0 0 5 0 0 19 15
173 216 SHELCO INC., Charlotte, N.C. 296.5 0.0 257.2 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
174 125 EDWARD KRAEMER & SONS INC., Plain, Wis. 296.0 0.0 237.0 0 0 0 1 0 99 0 0 0
175 141 KNUTSON CONSTRUCTION SERVICES, Minneapolis, Minn.† 295.0 0.0 NA 66 0 7 27 0 0 0 0 0
176 163 OLTMANS CONSTRUCTION CO., Whittier, Calif. 295.0 0.0 488.0 93 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
177 184 RIETH-RILEY CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Goshen, Ind. 295.0 0.0 295.0 22 1 0 0 0 69 0 0 0
178 146 LECHASE CONSTRUCTION SERVICES LLC, Rochester, N.Y. 294.4 1.3 398.1 73 19 0 0 9 0 0 0 34
179 203 MATT CONSTRUCTION CORP., Santa Fe Springs, Calif.† 294.0 0.0 290.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
180 275 WELBRO BUILDING CORP., Maitland, Fla.† 292.7 0.0 414.5 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10
181 208 ROCKFORD CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Grand Rapids, Mich. 286.3 0.0 113.6 97 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 55
182 151 THE CHRISTMAN CO., Lansing, Mich.† 283.3 0.0 289.2 90 0 5 5 0 0 0 0 74
183 252 DIMEO CONSTRUCTION CO., Providence, R.I.† 282.9 0.0 354.8 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 93
184 157 MORLEY BUILDERS, Santa Monica, Calif.† 281.8 0.0 367.8 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
185 193 THE PIKE CO. INC., Rochester, N.Y. 280.0 0.0 210.0 97 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 8
186 158 ROEL CONSTRUCTION CO., San Diego, Calif. 280.0 0.0 580.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
187 138 S.M. WILSON & CO., St. Louis, Mo.† 279.0 0.0 454.8 95 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 53
188 139 AMERICAN BRIDGE CO., Coraopolis, Pa.† 278.8 22.1 393.3 10 0 0 0 0 90 0 0 0
189 209 GARNEY HOLDING CO., Kansas City, Mo.† 278.5 0.0 330.7 0 0 0 100 0 0 0 0 19
190 260 LAUTH GROUP INC., Indianapolis, Ind. 278.0 0.0 751.5 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
191 340 THE KORTE CO., St. Louis, Mo.† 276.7 0.0 249.6 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
192 156 KINSLEY CONSTRUCTION INC., York, Pa.† 271.3 0.0 372.5 74 5 0 3 2 16 0 0 0
193 238 ROEBBELEN CONTRACTING INC., El Dorado Hills, Calif.† 268.0 0.0 409.3 76 0 0 0 0 0 0 24 40
194 333 GOTHAM CONSTRUCTION CO. LLC, New York, N.Y.† 267.8 0.0 431.7 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 84
195 245 LUNDA CONSTRUCTION CO., Black River Falls, Wis. 267.5 0.0 392.5 7 0 0 4 2 87 0 0 0
196 227 CCC GROUP INC., San Antonio, Texas 266.4 23.1 170.0 9 9 1 0 55 5 0 0 0
197 206 COASTAL CONSTRUCTION GROUP, Miami, Fla.† 265.4 0.0 485.9 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
198 276 JOSEPH JINGOLI & SON INC., Lawrenceville, N.J.† 265.1 0.0 309.0 55 0 41 3 0 0 0 0 51
199 228 LUSARDI CONSTRUCTION CO., San Marcos, Calif. 265.0 0.0 332.0 90 0 0 0 4 6 0 0 0
200 179 ANDERSON COLUMBIA CO. INC., Lake City, Fla.† 262.0 0.0 193.0 0 27 0 0 0 73 0 0 0
ENR
enr.com October 2006 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � 21
The Top 400 Contractors2005 MARKETS (% OF 2005 REVENUE)
RANK REVENUE NEW GEN. WTR./SWR. INDUS./ HAZ. TELE- CM-AT-RISK2006 2005 FIRM TOTAL INTL. CONTRACTS BLDG. MFG. POWER WASTE PETRO. TRANSP. WASTE COMM. % OF REV.
201 147 Q&D CONSTRUCTION INC., Sparks, Nev.† 262.0 0.0 319.4 44 0 0 1 0 7 0 0 0
202 175 LINBECK, Houston, Texas† 260.9 0.0 154.5 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 98
203 236 LEASE CRUTCHER LEWIS, Seattle, Wash. 258.5 6.2 400.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
204 197 CLARKSON CONSTRUCTION CO., Kansas City, Mo.† 257.0 0.0 391.0 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
205 166 E.E. REED CONSTRUCTION, Sugar Land, Texas† 257.0 0.0 272.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7
206 223 WESTON SOLUTIONS INC., West Chester, Pa.† 256.5 107.6 310.0 54 0 0 13 0 0 34 0 7
207 204 JEFFREY M. BROWN ASSOC., Huntingdon Valley, Pa. 251.1 0.0 383.4 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 75
208 239 CARDI CORP., Warwick, R.I. 250.0 0.0 165.0 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
209 183 M.B. KAHN CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Columbia, S.C. 247.1 0.0 330.7 70 15 2 13 1 0 0 0 12
210 222 H.J. RUSSELL & CO., Atlanta, Ga. 247.0 0.0 279.0 85 4 0 0 0 11 0 0 75
211 265 J.H. FINDORFF & SON INC., Madison, Wis. 246.0 0.0 203.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
212 195 GE JOHNSON CONSTRUCTION CO., Colorado Springs, Colo. 244.8 0.0 329.4 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
213 174 KAISER FOUNDATION HEALTH PLAN INC., Anaheim, Calif. 244.4 0.0 244.4 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
214 243 THE BRANCH GROUP INC., Roanoke, Va.† 243.3 0.0 203.9 39 0 0 1 0 48 0 0 0
215 167 SUMMIT BUILDERS, Phoenix, Ariz. 242.5 0.0 324.9 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
216 164 SPAWGLASS HOLDING LP, Selma, Texas† 241.5 0.0 296.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 28
217 196 HARKINS BUILDERS INC., Marriottsville, Md. 240.0 0.0 260.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
218 251 CLYDE COS., Orem, Utah† 238.6 0.0 NA 29 0 2 38 0 31 0 0 0
219 178 HERZOG CONTRACTING CORP., St. Joseph, Mo.† 238.0 0.0 115.0 0 0 0 2 0 98 0 0 0
220 255 PERFORMANCE CONTRACTORS INC., Baton Rouge, La. 237.0 0.0 260.0 0 1 1 0 98 0 0 0 0
221 264 D.L. WITHERS CONSTRUCTION, Phoenix, Ariz. 236.0 0.0 236.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 86
222 291 THE CONLAN CO., Marietta, Ga. 235.0 0.0 295.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
223 ** FTR INTERNATIONAL INC., Irvine, Calif. 235.0 0.0 235.0 60 0 0 15 10 15 0 0 10
224 244 SUKUT CONSTRUCTION INC., Santa Ana, Calif. 235.0 0.0 236.0 69 0 0 31 0 0 0 0 0
225 202 J. FLETCHER CREAMER & SON INC., Hackensack, N.J.† 235.0 0.0 187.4 18 0 3 34 1 30 8 7 0
226 220 BARR & BARR INC., New York, N.Y.† 234.7 0.0 531.3 93 1 6 0 0 0 0 0 100
227 ** VENTURE CONSTRUCTION CO., Norcross, Ga. 234.2 0.0 234.2 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
228 ** ARCO/MURRAY CONSTRUCTION COS., St. Louis, Mo. 232.0 0.0 190.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
229 211 THE CONTI GROUP, South Plainfield, N.J.† 230.8 0.0 380.4 2 0 5 24 0 49 15 0 0
230 181 O&G INDUSTRIES INC., Torrington, Conn. 230.7 0.0 379.4 57 3 15 1 0 24 0 0 46
231 249 BARTLETT COCKE GEN. CONTRACTORS, San Antonio, Texas 230.0 0.0 300.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 61
232 ** CLUNE CONSTRUCTION CO., Chicago, Ill. 230.0 0.0 230.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100
233 180 SAUNDERS CONSTRUCTION INC., Centennial, Colo. 230.0 0.0 315.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 89
234 188 THE JAYNES COS., Albuquerque, N.M.† 229.8 0.0 229.8 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 31
235 219 RODGERS BUILDERS INC., Charlotte, N.C.† 229.1 0.0 350.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100
236 150 NEW ENTERPRISE STONE & LIME, New Enterprise, Pa.† 228.6 0.0 276.3 0 0 0 0 0 98 0 2 0
237 360 HAGERMAN CONSTRUCTION CORP., Fort Wayne, Ind.† 227.5 0.0 320.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11
238 250 LEE LEWIS CONSTRUCTION INC., Lubbock, Texas 226.0 0.0 320.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 97
239 280 JAMES R. VANNOY & SONS CONSTR. CO., Jefferson, N.C. 226.0 0.0 200.0 88 3 0 0 0 9 0 0 0
240 231 DANIS BUILDING CONSTRUCTION CO., Dayton, Ohio 225.0 0.0 250.0 89 0 0 7 4 0 0 0 40
241 305 MACOMBER BUILDERS, Boston, Mass. 224.3 0.0 80.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 67
242 269 THE WALSH GROUP, Portland, Ore.† 223.9 0.0 270.1 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 45
243 207 LEOPARDO COS. INC., Hoffman Estates, Ill. 221.1 0.0 243.5 96 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0
244 390 FREDERICK QUINN CORP., Addison, Ill. 219.0 0.0 130.6 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 76
245 234 TELLEPSEN, Houston, Texas † 218.0 0.0 368.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12
246 199 EDGE DEVELOPMENT INC., Temecula, Calif. 215.0 0.0 240.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
247 241 STAKER & PARSON COS., Ogden, Utah† 214.2 0.0 253.5 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 100
248 229 R&O CONSTRUCTION, Ogden, Utah 214.0 0.0 200.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
249 336 CG SCHMIDT INC., Milwaukee, Wis.† 214.0 0.0 270.2 90 6 0 0 0 5 0 0 84
250 ** THE TOWER GROUP INC., Davie, Fla. 213.8 10.8 310.8 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
ENR
enr.com October 2006 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � 23
The Top 400 Contractors2005 MARKETS (% OF 2005 REVENUE)
RANK REVENUE NEW GEN. WTR./SWR. INDUS./ HAZ. TELE- CM-AT-RISK2006 2005 FIRM TOTAL INTL. CONTRACTS BLDG. MFG. POWER WASTE PETRO. TRANSP. WASTE COMM. % OF REV.
251 185 WILLIAM A. BERRY & SON INC., Danvers, Mass. 210.4 18.2 374.4 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100
252 297 SEVENSON ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES, Niagara Falls, N.Y.† 204.3 0.0 220.5 0 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0
253 225 E.W. HOWELL CO. INC., Woodbury, N.Y. 204.1 0.0 225.6 97 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 23
254 224 FAULKNERUSA, Austin, Texas 203.0 0.0 272.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
255 221 KEY CONSTRUCTION INC., Wichita, Kan. 203.0 0.0 235.0 82 0 0 0 0 0 0 18 21
256 226 COAKLEY & WILLIAMS CONSTRUCTION, Gaithersburg, Md. 202.6 0.0 229.6 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
257 318 CONTINENTAL BUILDING SYSTEMS, Columbus, Ohio 202.2 0.0 NA 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
258 266 GRUNLEY CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Rockville, Md. 202.0 0.0 228.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
259 377 J.J. WHITE INC., Philadelphia, Pa. 201.0 0.0 140.0 7 10 30 0 45 2 0 5 0
260 315 SHAW CONSTRUCTION, Denver, Colo. 200.1 0.0 NA 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
261 273 HILL & WILKINSON LTD., Plano, Texas 200.0 0.0 171.0 82 12 0 0 6 0 0 0 0
262 215 J.F. WHITE CONTRACTING CO., Framingham, Mass.† 200.0 0.0 135.0 28 0 2 2 0 68 0 1 0
263 374 WINTER PARK CONSTRUCTION CO., Maitland, Fla. 200.0 0.0 90.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
264 354 WHARTON-SMITH INC., Lake Monroe, Fla.† 199.5 18.5 234.4 32 0 0 66 0 0 0 0 26
265 398 ROCKFORD BLACKTOP CONSTRUCTION, Loves Park, Ill.† 199.0 0.0 314.0 27 4 3 16 0 50 0 0 8
266 295 SLETTEN COS., Great Falls, Mont.† 198.6 0.0 309.5 63 0 0 22 0 15 0 0 0
267 359 S&B HOLDINGS LTD. AND AFFILIATES, Houston, Texas† 197.5 0.0 200.0 0 0 30 0 70 0 0 0 0
268 338 T.N. WARD CO., Ardmore, Pa. 197.1 0.0 254.1 82 0 0 0 0 18 0 0 80
269 257 C.D. SMITH CONSTRUCTION, Fond Du Lac, Wis. 196.4 0.0 190.0 83 0 0 17 0 0 0 0 0
270 200 SOLTEK PACIFIC, San Diego, Calif. 195.2 0.0 169.3 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
271 247 WORTH CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Bethel, Conn. 195.0 0.0 156.8 99 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
272 230 ANDERSEN CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Portland, Ore.† 195.0 0.0 240.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
273 288 INTECH CONSTRUCTION, Philadelphia, Pa. 194.6 0.0 118.1 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 98
274 ** LYDIG CONSTRUCTION INC., Spokane, Wash. 193.1 6.1 245.8 98 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
275 281 GRANGER CONSTRUCTION CO., Lansing, Mich. 192.2 0.0 178.1 98 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 92
276 322 FORRESTER CONSTRUCTION CO., Rockville, Md. 191.5 0.0 226.0 91 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 65
277 345 ARMADA HOFFLER CONSTRUCTION CO., Virginia Beach, Va. 191.0 0.0 300.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
278 217 FUSCO CORP., New Haven, Conn. 190.4 0.0 148.8 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 90
279 201 CIVES STEEL CO., Roswell, Ga.† 190.0 0.0 295.0 40 20 25 0 10 5 0 0 0
280 279 HARPER INDUSTRIES INC., Paducah, Ky.† 190.0 0.0 NA 28 0 1 0 11 8 0 0 25
281 ** DANELLA COS. INC., Plymouth Meeting, Pa.† 188.6 0.0 180.1 0 0 33 27 0 0 0 40 0
282 218 THE FACILITY GROUP, Smyrna, Ga.† 188.0 35.0 235.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
283 261 KLINGER COS. INC., Sioux City, Iowa† 187.0 0.0 151.0 35 13 1 0 51 0 0 0 0
284 299 MASCARO CONSTRUCTION CO. LP, Pittsburgh, Pa.† 186.6 0.0 224.7 76 0 13 1 0 10 0 0 36
285 298 J.P. CULLEN & SONS INC., Janesville, Wis. 186.1 0.0 254.1 85 15 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
286 289 GEORGE W. AUCH CO., Pontiac, Mich. 185.7 0.0 264.6 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 28
287 248 DONOHOE CONSTRUCTION CO., Washington, D.C. 185.3 0.0 290.5 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
288 256 C. OVERAA & CO., Richmond, Calif. 184.9 0.0 213.7 49 0 0 41 9 1 0 0 0
289 262 J.D. ABRAMS LP, Austin, Texas 184.9 0.0 153.8 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
290 350 GERALD H. PHIPPS INC., Denver, Colo. 184.0 0.0 220.0 99 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 82
291 286 SATTERFIELD & PONTIKES CONSTRUCTION, Houston, Texas 183.5 0.0 195.0 95 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0
292 270 CHARTER BUILDERS LTD., Dallas, Texas 182.2 0.0 256.5 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 97
293 363 ENGINEERED STRUCTURES INC., Boise, Idaho 181.0 0.0 204.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 25
294 254 JM OLSON CORP., St. Clair Shores, Mich. 181.0 0.0 145.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 69
295 306 HAWKINS CONSTRUCTION CO., Omaha, Neb. 180.7 0.0 182.9 31 0 0 7 0 63 0 0 13
296 327 ABSHER CONSTRUCTION CO., Puyallup, Wash. 180.0 0.0 223.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
297 274 RAY BELL CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Brentwood, Tenn.† 179.0 0.0 352.0 45 0 0 1 0 54 0 0 4
298 253 MANSON CONSTRUCTION CO., Seattle, Wash. 178.0 0.0 NA 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
299 317 VECO CORP., Anchorage, Alaska† 177.3 78.3 195.0 0 0 0 0 85 0 0 15 0
300 232 MARSHALL ERDMAN & ASSOCIATES, Madison, Wis. 177.0 0.0 175.6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ENR
24 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � October 2006 enr.com
The Top 400 Contractors2005 MARKETS (% OF 2005 REVENUE)
RANK REVENUE NEW GEN. WTR./SWR. INDUS./ HAZ. TELE- CM-AT-RISK2006 2005 FIRM TOTAL INTL. CONTRACTS BLDG. MFG. POWER WASTE PETRO. TRANSP. WASTE COMM. % OF REV.
301 246 TRAYLOR BROS. INC., Evansville, Ind. 176.0 0.0 179.0 0 0 0 45 0 55 0 0 0
302 399 CDM, Cambridge, Mass.† 175.0 22.0 167.0 2 1 1 67 6 3 17 1 17
303 309 HASELDEN CONSTRUCTION LLC, Centennial, Colo. 175.0 0.0 296.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 74
304 259 KBS INC., Richmond, Va. 175.0 0.0 193.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 37
305 ** F.J. SCIAME CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., New York, N.Y. 174.3 0.0 NA 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100
306 263 SHIEL SEXTON CO. INC., Indianapolis, Ind. 174.0 0.0 202.0 83 0 0 0 17 0 0 0 95
307 177 MWH, Broomfield, Colo.† 173.9 0.0 241.0 0 0 0 79 0 0 21 0 0
308 278 RONCELLI INC., Sterling Heights, Mich. 173.0 0.0 183.0 60 30 0 0 10 0 0 0 60
309 304 PARIC CORP., O’Fallon, Mo. 171.6 0.0 NA 99 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 65
310 358 KRAEMER BROTHERS LLC, Plain, Wis. 170.7 0.0 170.7 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
311 212 HK SYSTEMS INC., Milwaukee, Wis.† 170.7 4.6 169.3 0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
312 ** HAYDON BUILDING CORP., Phoenix, Ariz. 170.0 0.0 230.0 62 0 0 11 0 25 0 0 65
313 343 WHITE-SPUNNER CONSTRUCTION INC., Mobile, Ala. 170.0 5.0 112.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
314 283 TLT CONSTRUCTION CORP., Wakefield, Mass. 169.9 0.0 225.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
315 347 ORION MARINE GROUP, Houston, Texas† 167.0 24.2 183.0 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
316 267 SUPERIOR CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Gary, Ind. 166.1 0.0 126.1 0 0 0 0 20 80 0 0 0
317 357 SPAULDING & SLYE CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Boston, Mass. 166.0 0.0 195.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100
318 321 RIVER CITY CONSTRUCTION LLC, E. Peoria, Ill. 165.1 0.0 181.0 72 12 0 16 0 0 0 0 0
319 213 ODEBRECHT CONSTRUCTION INC., Coral Gables, Fla. 164.8 29.3 540.0 20 0 18 0 0 62 0 0 81
320 320 VRH CONSTRUCTION CORP., Englewood, N.J. 163.5 0.0 64.0 44 0 0 0 0 56 0 0 63
321 237 BARNARD CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Bozeman, Mont.† 162.3 0.0 232.3 0 0 0 97 3 0 0 0 0
322 258 FNF CONSTRUCTION, Tempe, Ariz. 161.2 0.0 225.0 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
323 382 SLOAN CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Duncan, S.C. 161.0 0.0 100.0 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
324 348 STRUEVER BROS. ECCLES & ROUSE INC., Baltimore, Md.† 160.2 0.0 217.3 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 76
325 326 BUCON INC. (BUTLER CONSTRUCTION), Kansas City, Mo. 159.0 0.0 124.0 89 0 0 0 2 9 0 0 0
326 323 CLARK & SULLIVAN CONSTRUCTION, Sparks, Nev.† 158.0 0.0 180.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
327 285 ELKINS CONSTRUCTORS INC., Jacksonville, Fla.† 158.0 0.0 189.0 96 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
328 ** HUNZINGER CONSTRUCTION CO., Brookfield, Wis. 157.5 0.0 179.7 99 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 50
329 308 M.A. ANGELIADES INC., Long Island City, N.Y. 157.0 0.0 260.0 59 0 0 0 0 41 0 0 0
330 328 THE MIDDLESEX COS., Littleton, Mass. 156.6 0.0 191.3 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
331 ** COMMERCIAL CONTRACTING CORP., Auburn Hills, Mich.† 156.0 15.0 165.0 0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
332 287 THE HANOVER CO., Houston, Texas 155.0 0.0 430.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
333 294 HARBOUR CONTRACTORS INC., Plainfield, Ill.† 155.0 0.0 122.0 87 0 0 0 0 13 0 0 13
334 381 RAILROAD CONSTRUCTION FAMILY OF COS., Paterson, N.J.† 155.0 0.0 165.0 35 5 6 0 0 48 1 3 0
335 400 MARCH ASSOCIATES, Wayne, N.J. 154.9 0.0 309.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
336 342 CLARK CONSTRUCTION, Lansing, Mich. 154.5 0.0 295.8 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 85
337 292 W.G. MILLS, Sarasota, Fla. 154.0 0.0 88.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 91
338 349 ROCHE CONSTRUCTORS INC., Greeley, Colo. 153.3 0.0 153.3 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 35
339 282 BMW CONSTRUCTORS INC., Indianapolis, Ind.† 153.0 0.0 153.0 0 9 7 0 84 0 0 0 0
340 387 IMC CONSTRUCTION, Malvern, Pa. 153.0 0.0 164.0 91 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 76
341 362 CONSIGLI CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Milford, Mass. 152.7 0.0 199.7 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 51
342 341 DOSTER CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Birmingham, Ala. 152.3 0.0 144.0 86 14 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
343 284 AJAX BUILDING CORP., Midway, Fla. 152.0 0.0 190.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 99
344 303 HISAW & ASSOCIATES GEN. CONTRACTORS, Carrollton, Texas 151.9 0.0 61.5 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 80
345 331 JUDLAU CONTRACTING, College Point, N.Y. 151.7 0.0 100.1 0 0 0 23 0 77 0 0 0
346 361 ALBERT C. KOBAYASHI INC., Waipahu, Hawaii 151.3 0.0 360.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
347 364 SHIMMICK CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Hayward, Calif.† 150.6 0.0 220.0 0 0 0 24 0 76 0 0 0
348 110 THOS. S. BYRNE LTD., Fort Worth, Texas† 150.0 0.0 226.0 73 27 0 0 0 0 0 0 53
349 316 OWEN-AMES-KIMBALL CO., Grand Rapids, Mich.† 150.0 0.0 143.0 63 7 0 5 0 5 0 0 52
350 311 FRONTIER-KEMPER CONSTRUCTORS INC., Evansville, Ind.† 149.9 0.0 79.6 0 0 0 59 0 14 0 0 0
ENR
26 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � October 2006 enr.com
The Top 400 Contractors2005 MARKETS (% OF 2005 REVENUE)
RANK REVENUE NEW GEN. WTR./SWR. INDUS./ HAZ. TELE- CM-AT-RISK2006 2005 FIRM TOTAL INTL. CONTRACTS BLDG. MFG. POWER WASTE PETRO. TRANSP. WASTE COMM. % OF REV.
351 ** NIBBI BROTHERS CONSTRUCTION, San Francisco, Calif. 149.6 0.0 130.2 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
352 339 SEMA CONSTRUCTION INC., Centennial, Colo. 149.0 0.0 165.0 0 0 0 24 0 62 0 0 0
353 356 URS, San Francisco, Calif.† 148.5 0.0 150.8 52 2 2 0 4 33 0 0 0
354 391 CAJUN CONSTRUCTORS INC., Baton Rouge, La. 147.0 0.0 139.0 0 0 0 63 37 0 0 0 0
355 ** OSCAR RENDA CONTRACTING INC., Roanoke, Texas 146.9 0.0 152.4 0 0 0 100 0 0 0 0 0
356 373 ROGERS-O’BRIEN CONSTRUCTION CO., Dallas, Texas 145.3 0.0 131.1 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
357 ** THE DIETZE CONSTRUCTION GROUP, Chantilly, Va. 145.0 0.0 145.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
358 ** CAPSTONE BUILDING CORP., Birmingham, Ala. 144.8 0.0 151.7 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
359 344 PIONEER GENERAL CONTRACTORS, Grand Rapids, Mich.† 144.0 0.0 128.0 66 13 0 0 21 0 0 0 0
360 371 BRINKMANN CONSTRUCTORS, Chesterfield, Mo. 143.5 0.0 202.0 88 0 0 2 0 10 0 0 0
361 ** BAYLEY CONSTRUCTION, Mercer Island, Wash. 143.0 0.0 283.7 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
362 394 WILLIAMS CO., Orlando, Fla. 142.5 0.0 160.7 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 76
363 302 FCL BUILDERS INC., Itasca, Ill. 142.0 0.0 195.7 83 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
364 290 CROWDER CONSTRUCTION CO., Charlotte, N.C. 141.8 0.0 267.0 14 0 12 47 6 15 0 0 0
365 380 IHC CONSTRUCTION COS. LLC, Elgin, Ill. 141.3 0.0 122.9 63 0 0 16 0 8 0 12 43
366 301 GARCO CONSTRUCTION INC., Spokane, Wash.† 141.2 0.0 162.1 35 2 0 0 11 52 0 0 0
367 395 BOWEN ENGINEERING CORP., Indianapolis, Ind. 140.0 0.0 140.0 0 0 36 57 7 0 0 0 0
368 367 BULLEY & ANDREWS LLC, Chicago, Ill.† 140.0 0.0 151.0 95 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
369 368 TERMINAL CONSTRUCTION CORP., Woodridge, N.J. 140.0 0.0 110.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
370 ** CUTLER ASSOCIATES INC., Worcester, Mass.† 138.8 0.0 181.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
371 ** GARY C. WYATT GENERAL CONTRACTOR, Birmingham, Ala. 138.0 0.0 225.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
372 296 DOOLEYMACK CONSTRUCTORS INC., Sarasota, Fla. 137.3 0.0 158.3 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 53
373 307 GAMMA CONSTRUCTION CO., Houston, Texas 137.1 0.0 89.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
374 ** THE CUST-O-FAB COS. LLC, Tulsa, Okla.† 136.4 5.1 153.0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0 0
375 334 THE HENDERSON CORP., Raritan, N.J. 136.3 0.0 145.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 35
376 277 EDIS CONSTRUCTION MANAGERS, Wilmington, Del. 136.0 0.0 NA 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 51
377 ** BSI CONSTRUCTORS INC., St. Louis, Mo. 135.4 0.0 143.1 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
378 335 CATAMOUNT CONSTRUCTORS INC., Evergreen, Colo. 135.0 0.0 162.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
379 353 THE RUHLIN CO., Sharon Center, Ohio 132.9 0.0 61.0 43 0 0 0 1 56 0 0 0
380 ** AMERICON CONSTRUCTION INC., New York, N.Y. 132.0 26.0 NA 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
381 ** HARVEY CONSTRUCTION CORP., Bedford, N.H. 132.0 0.0 97.3 96 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 69
382 396 HUNTER CONTRACTING CO., Gilbert, Ariz. 131.0 0.0 128.0 0 0 0 44 0 56 0 0 31
383 369 WESPAC CONSTRUCTION INC., Phoenix, Ariz. 131.0 0.0 166.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16
384 376 HBD CONTRACTING INC., St. Louis, Mo. 130.8 0.0 104.8 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
385 383 MONARCH CONSTRUCTION CO., Cincinnati, Ohio† 130.2 0.0 136.4 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
386 ** M.J. HARRIS INC., Birmingham, Ala. 130.0 0.0 219.1 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
387 ** THE GEORGE SOLLITT CONSTRUCTION CO., Wood Dale, Ill. 130.0 0.0 187.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16
388 312 SHOOK NATIONAL CORP., Dayton, Ohio† 129.9 0.0 165.8 29 8 0 38 0 3 0 22 0
389 329 RUSSELL CONSTRUCTION CO. INC., Davenport, Iowa 129.5 0.0 50.4 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 87
390 ** INTERSTATE HIGHWAY CONSTRUCTION, Englewood, Colo. 129.0 0.0 70.0 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0
391 ** AMERICAN CONSTRUCTORS INC., Nashville, Tenn. 127.4 0.0 265.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 98
392 293 RENTENBACH ENGINEERING CO., Knoxville, Tenn. 127.3 0.0 123.7 98 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 70
393 ** M+W ZANDER US OPERATIONS INC., Plano, Texas† 127.0 27.7 180.0 0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 38
394 ** NORTHERN IMPROVEMENT CO., Fargo, N.D.† 127.0 0.0 111.5 0 0 0 4 0 96 0 0 0
395 ** GLOBAL PERFORMANCE, Greenville, S.C.† 126.4 0.0 168.0 0 75 0 0 25 0 0 0 0
396 332 ACI CONSTRUCTION SERVICES, Tampa, Fla. 125.0 0.0 150.4 82 0 0 0 0 18 0 0 0
397 366 BRINDERSON, Westminster, Calif. 125.0 0.0 150.0 0 0 8 0 92 0 0 0 0
398 351 CURRENT BUILDERS CONSTR. SVCS., Pompano Beach, Fla.† 125.0 0.0 174.0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
399 ** MCCRORY BUILDING CO. INC., Birmingham, Ala. 121.3 0.0 80.9 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
400 375 FONTAINE BROS. INC., kSpringfield, Mass. 121.1 0.0 209.4 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
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30 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � October 2006 enr.com
AABB LUMMUS GLOBAL 100J.D. ABRAMS LP 289ABSHER CONSTRUCTION CO. 296ACI CONSTRUCTION SERVICES 396ADOLFSON & PETERSON
CONSTRUCTION 97AJAX BUILDING CORP. 343AKER KVAERNER 86ALBERICI CORP. 39THE ALTER GROUP 133AMEC AMERICAS 63AMERICAN BRIDGE CO. 188AMERICAN CONSTRUCTORS INC. 391AMERICAN INFRASTRUCTURE INC. 111AMERICON CONSTRUCTION INC. 380AMES CONSTRUCTION INC. 91S.J. AMOROSO CONSTRUCTION 154ANDERSEN CONSTRUCTION
CO. INC. 272ANDERSON COLUMBIA CO. INC. 200ROY ANDERSON CORP. 151M.A. ANGELIADES INC. 329APAC 22ARCO/MURRAY CONSTRUCTION
COS. 228ARMADA HOFFLER CONSTRUCTION
CO. 277THE ATLANTIC GROUP 150GEORGE W. AUCH CO. 286AUSTIN INDUSTRIES 31
BBALFOUR BEATTY CONSTRUCTION
INC. 59BARNARD CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 321DOUGLAS E. BARNHART INC. 90BARNHILL CONTRACTING CO. 165BARR & BARR INC. 226BARTLETT COCKE GENERAL
CONTRACTORS 231BARTON MALOW CO. 37BATSON-COOK CO. 136BAYLEY CONSTRUCTION 361BBL CONSTRUCTION SERVICES LLC 70BE&K INC. 40BECHTEL 1THE BECK GROUP 72RAY BELL CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 297BERNARDS 125WILLIAM A. BERRY & SON INC. 251BIG-D CORP. 158BLACK & VEATCH 52BMW CONSTRUCTORS INC. 339BOH BROS. CONSTRUCTION CO.
LLC 138THE BOLDT CO. 69BOVIS LEND LEASE 7BOWEN ENGINEERING CORP. 367THE BRANCH GROUP INC. 214BRASFIELD & GORRIE LLC 28BRICE BUILDING CO. INC. 153BRINDERSON 397BRINKMANN CONSTRUCTORS 360
JEFFREY M. BROWN ASSOC. 207BSI CONSTRUCTORS INC. 377BUCON INC. (BUTLER
CONSTRUCTION) 325BULLEY & ANDREWS LLC 368BURNS & MCDONNELL 144BUTZ ENTERPRISES INC. 131THOS. S. BYRNE LTD. 348
CCADDELL CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 162CAJUN CONSTRUCTORS INC. 354CAPSTONE BUILDING CORP. 358CARDI CORP. 208CATAMOUNT CONSTRUCTORS INC. 378CB&I 20CCC GROUP INC. 196CDI CONTRACTORS LLC 134CDM 302CENTEX 2CH2M HILL COS. 38CHANEN CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 146CHARTER BUILDERS LTD. 292CHOATE CONSTRUCTION CO. 99THE CHRISTMAN CO. 182CIANBRO CORP. 171LPCIMINELLI INC. 155CIVES STEEL CO. 279CLANCY & THEYS CONSTRUCTION
CO. 117CLARK & SULLIVAN CONSTRUCTION 326CLARK CONSTRUCTION 336CLARK GROUP 12JOHN S. CLARK CO. LLC 163CLARKSON CONSTRUCTION CO. 204CLAYCO 96CLUNE CONSTRUCTION CO. 232CLYDE COS. 218COAKLEY & WILLIAMS
CONSTRUCTION 256COASTAL CONSTRUCTION GROUP 197COMMERCIAL CONTRACTING CORP. 331THE CONLAN CO. 222CONSIGLI CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 341THE CONTI GROUP 229CONTINENTAL BUILDING SYSTEMS 257CONTRACK INTERNATIONAL 140CORE CONSTRUCTION GROUP 94J. FLETCHER CREAMER & SON
INC. 225CROSSLAND CONSTRUCTION CO. 148CROWDER CONSTRUCTION CO. 364CSI CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 124J.P. CULLEN & SONS INC. 285CURRENT BUILDERS CONSTR.
SVCS. 398THE CUST-O-FAB COS. LLC 374CUTLER ASSOCIATES INC. 370
DDANELLA COS. INC. 281DANIS BUILDING CONSTRUCTION
CO. 240JAMES G. DAVIS CONSTRUCTION
CORP. 78
DAY & ZIMMERMANN GROUP 65S.D. DEACON CORP. 164DEVCON CONSTRUCTION INC. 66DICK CONSTRUCTION CO. 55P.J. DICK-TRUMBULL-LINDY 103THE DIETZE CONSTRUCTION
GROUP 357DIMEO CONSTRUCTION CO. 183DOOLEYMACK CONSTRUCTORS INC. 372DONOHOE CONSTRUCTION CO. 287DOSTER CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 342DPR CONSTRUCTION INC. 46L.F. DRISCOLL CO. 112C.W. DRIVER 147DUKE CONSTRUCTION 54J.E. DUNN CONSTRUCTION GROUP 19
EEARTH TECH INC. 76EDGE DEVELOPMENT INC. 246EDIS CONSTRUCTION MANAGERS 376ELKINS CONSTRUCTORS INC. 327EMJ CORP. 115MARSHALL ERDMAN &
ASSOCIATES 300ENGINEERED STRUCTURES INC. 293
FTHE FACILITY GROUP 282FAGEN INC. 118FAULKNERUSA 254FCL BUILDERS INC. 363J.H. FINDORFF & SON INC. 211FLATIRON CONSTRUCTION 128THE FLINTCO COS. INC. 58FLUOR CORP. 3FNF CONSTRUCTION 322FONTAINE BROS. INC. 400FORRESTER CONSTRUCTION CO. 276FOSTER WHEELER LTD. 30FRONTIER-KEMPER CONSTRUCTORS
INC. 350FRU-CON CONSTRUCTION CORP. 60FTR INTERNATIONAL INC. 223FUSCO CORP. 278
GGAMMA CONSTRUCTION CO. 373GARCO CONSTRUCTION INC. 366GARNEY HOLDING CO. 189GILBANE BUILDING CO. 14GLOBAL PERFORMANCE 395GOTHAM CONSTRUCTION CO. LLC 194GRANGER CONSTRUCTION CO. 275GRANITE CONSTRUCTION INC. 15GRAY CONSTRUCTION 126GRAYCOR 120GREAT LAKES DREDGE & DOCK
CORP. LLC 127GRUNLEY CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 258
HH+M CO. INC. 121HAGERMAN CONSTRUCTION CORP. 237THE HANOVER CO. 332
B.L. HARBERT INTERNATIONAL 129HARBOUR CONTRACTORS INC. 333HARKINS BUILDERS INC. 217HARPER INDUSTRIES INC. 280M.J. HARRIS INC. 386HARVEY CONSTRUCTION CORP. 381DAVID E. HARVEY BUILDERS INC. 113HASELDEN CONSTRUCTION LLC 303THE HASKELL CO. 79HATHAWAY DINWIDDIE
CONSTRUCTION 149HAWAIIAN DREDGING CONSTRUCTION
CO. INC. 104HAWKINS CONSTRUCTION CO. 295HAYDON BUILDING CORP. 312HBD CONTRACTING INC. 384HBE CORP. 109THE HENDERSON CORP. 375HENSEL PHELPS
CONSTRUCTION CO. 24HERZOG CONTRACTING CORP. 219HILL & WILKINSON LTD. 261HISAW & ASSOCIATES GENERAL
CONTRACTORS 344HITT CONTRACTING INC. 81HK SYSTEMS INC. 311HOAR CONSTRUCTION LLC 145HOFFMAN CORP. 49HOLDER CONSTRUCTION CO. 57E.W. HOWELL CO. INC. 253HRH CONSTRUCTION LLC 82THE HUBBARD GROUP 114HUNT CONSTRUCTION GROUP INC. 27HUNT BUILDING CO. LTD. 110HUNTER CONTRACTING CO. 382HUNZINGER CONSTRUCTION CO. 328
IJANGELO IAFRATE COS. 135IHC CONSTRUCTION COS. LLC 365IMC CONSTRUCTION 340INDUSTRIAL CONTRACTORS INC. 141INSITUFORM TECHNOLOGIES 67INTECH CONSTRUCTION 273INTERSTATE HIGHWAY
CONSTRUCTION 390JACOBS 9JACOBSEN
CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 139THE JAYNES COS. 234JOSEPH JINGOLI & SON INC. 198GE JOHNSON CONSTRUCTION CO. 212C.F. JORDAN INVESTMENTS LLP 160W.M. JORDAN CO. INC. 169JUDLAU CONTRACTING 345
KM.B. KAHN CONSTRUCTION CO.
INC. 209KAISER FOUNDATION HEALTH PLAN
INC. 213KAJIMA CONSTRUCTION SERVICES 122KBR 4KBS INC. 304KEATING BUILDING CORP. 156
FIRM RANK
Where To Find the Top 400FIRM RANK FIRM RANK FIRM RANK
ENR
FIRM RANK FIRM RANK FIRM RANK FIRM RANK
Where To Find the Top 400
KENNY CONSTRUCTION 132KEY CONSTRUCTION INC. 255KIEWIT CORP. 8KINSLEY CONSTRUCTION INC. 192KITCHELL CORP. 88KLINGER COS. INC. 283KNUTSON CONSTRUCTION
SERVICES 175ALBERT C. KOBAYASHI INC. 346KOKOSING CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 74KONOVER CONSTRUCTION CORP. 167THE KORTE CO. 191KRAEMER BROTHERS LLC 310EDWARD KRAEMER & SONS INC. 174KRAFT CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 93KRAUS-ANDERSON CONSTRUCTION
CO. 50
LTHE LANE CONSTRUCTION CORP. 44LAUTH GROUP INC. 190LAYNE CHRISTENSEN CO. 71THE LAYTON COS. 77LEASE CRUTCHER LEWIS 203LECHASE CONSTRUCTION
SERVICES LLC 178LEOPARDO COS. INC. 243LEE LEWIS CONSTRUCTION INC. 238
LINBECK 202LUNDA CONSTRUCTION CO. 195LUSARDI CONSTRUCTION CO. 199LYDIG CONSTRUCTION INC. 274
MM+W ZANDER US OPERATIONS INC. 393MACOMBER BUILDERS 241MANHATTAN CONSTRUCTION CO. 45MANSON CONSTRUCTION CO. 298MARCH ASSOCIATES 335MARNELL CORRAO ASSOC. 68MARTIN-HARRIS CONSTRUCTION 157MASCARO CONSTRUCTION CO. LP 284MATRIX SERVICE CO. 102MATT CONSTRUCTION CORP. 179MCCARTHY BUILDING COS. INC. 21MCCRORY BUILDING CO. INC. 399MCGOUGH COS. 98JAMES MCHUGH
CONSTRUCTION CO. 101THE MCSHANE COS. 119MESSER CONSTRUCTION 92MICHELS CORP. 95THE MIDDLESEX COS. 330W.G. MILLS 337MIRON CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 130MONARCH CONSTRUCTION CO. 385
MORGANTI GROUP INC. 168MORLEY BUILDERS 184M.A. MORTENSON CO. 35MOSS & ASSOCIATES LLC 161MWH 307
NONABHOLZ CONSTRUCTION CORP. 172NEW ENTERPRISE STONE & LIME 236NIBBI BROTHERS CONSTRUCTION 351NORTHERN IMPROVEMENT CO. 394O&G INDUSTRIES INC. 230ODEBRECHT CONSTRUCTION INC. 319OKLAND CONSTRUCTION 123JM OLSON CORP. 294OLTMANS CONSTRUCTION CO. 176O’NEIL INDUSTRIES INC. 87OPUS GROUP 42ORION MARINE GROUP 315C. OVERAA & CO. 288OWEN-AMES-KIMBALL CO. 349
PPANATTONI CONSTRUCTION INC. 75PARIC CORP. 309PARSONS 32PCL CONSTRUCTION ENTERPRISES
INC. 10THE PENTA BUILDING GROUP INC. 159
PEPPER CONSTRUCTION GROUP 48PERFORMANCE
CONTRACTORS INC. 220PERINI CORP. 26GERALD H. PHIPPS INC. 290THE PIKE CO. INC. 185PIONEER GENERAL CONTRACTORS 359PIZZAGALLI CONSTRUCTION 108POWER CONSTRUCTION CO. 84PRIMORIS CORP. 107
QRQ&D CONSTRUCTION INC. 201FREDERICK QUINN CORP. 244R&O CONSTRUCTION 248RAILROAD CONSTRUCTION FAMILY
OF COS. 334E.E. REED CONSTRUCTION 205OSCAR RENDA CONTRACTING INC. 355RENTENBACH ENGINEERING CO. 392RIETH-RILEY
CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 177RIVER CITY CONSTRUCTION LLC 318THE ROBINS & MORTON GROUP 106ROCHE CONSTRUCTORS INC. 338ROCKFORD BLACKTOP
CONSTRUCTION 265ROCKFORD CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 181RODGERS BUILDERS INC. 235
32 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � October 2006 enr.com
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FIRM RANK FIRM RANK FIRM RANK FIRM RANK
Where To Find the Top 400
ROEBBELEN CONTRACTING INC. 193ROEL CONSTRUCTION CO. 186ROGERS-O’BRIEN
CONSTRUCTION CO. 356RONCELLI INC. 308THE RUDOLPH/LIBBE COS. INC. 166THE RUHLIN CO. 379RUSSELL CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 389H.J. RUSSELL & CO. 210RYAN COS. US INC. 51
SS&B HOLDINGS LTD. AND
AFFILIATES 267SATTERFIELD & PONTIKES
CONSTRUCTION 291SAUNDERS CONSTRUCTION INC. 233CG SCHMIDT INC. 249F.J. SCIAME
CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 305SELLEN CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 142SEMA CONSTRUCTION INC. 352SEVENSON ENVIRONMENTAL
SERVICES 252SHAW CONSTRUCTION 260THE SHAW GROUP INC. 17SHAWMUT DESIGN AND
CONSTRUCTION 89SHELCO INC. 173
SHIEL SEXTON CO. INC. 306SHIMMICK CONSTRUCTION CO.
INC. 347SHOOK NATIONAL CORP. 388SKANSKA USA INC. 6SLETTEN COS. 266SLOAN CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 323C.D. SMITH CONSTRUCTION 269THE GEORGE SOLLITT CONSTRUCTION
CO. 387SOLTEK PACIFIC 270SPAULDING & SLYE CONSTRUCTION
CO. INC. 317SPAWGLASS HOLDING LP 216STAKER & PARSON COS. 247THE STELLAR GROUP 116STRUCTURE TONE INC. 16STRUEVER BROS. ECCLES & ROUSE
INC. 324SUFFOLK CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 41SUKUT CONSTRUCTION INC. 224SUMMIT BUILDERS 215SUNDT CONSTRUCTION INC. 64SUPERIOR CONSTRUCTION CO.
INC. 316SWINERTON INC. 23
TUVTEICHERT CONSTRUCTION 61TELLEPSEN 245
TERMINAL CONSTRUCTION CORP. 369TIC HOLDINGS INC. 33TLT CONSTRUCTION CORP. 314TORCON INC. 105THE TOWER GROUP INC. 250TRAYLOR BROS. INC. 301THE TURNER CORP. 5TURNER INDUSTRIES GROUP LLC 47TUTOR-SALIBA CORP. 62URS 353VALLEYCREST COS. 53JAMES R. VANNOY & SONS
CONSTRUCTION CO. 239VCC 85VECELLIO GROUP INC. 143VECO CORP. 299VENTURE CONSTRUCTION CO. 227VRH CONSTRUCTION CORP. 320
WXYZWALBRIDGE ALDINGER 43THE WALSH GROUP 242THE WALSH GROUP LTD. 18WALTON CONSTRUCTION CO. LLC 56T.N. WARD CO. 268WASHINGTON GROUP
INTERNATIONAL 13WEBCOR BUILDERS 29FRED WEBER INC. 170
WEEKS MARINE INC. 137WEIS BUILDERS INC. 80THE WEITZ CO. LLC 36WELBRO BUILDING CORP. 180WESPAC CONSTRUCTION INC. 383WESTON SOLUTIONS INC. 206WHARTON-SMITH INC. 264J.F. WHITE CONTRACTING CO. 262J.J. WHITE INC. 259WHITE-SPUNNER CONSTRUCTION
INC. 313THE WHITING-TURNER
CONTRACTING CO. 11F.A. WILHELM CONSTRUCTION
CO. INC. 152WILLIAMS BROTHERS
CONSTRUCTION CO. 73WILLIAMS CO. 362S.M. WILSON & CO. 187WINTER PARK CONSTRUCTION CO. 263D.L. WITHERS CONSTRUCTION 221WORTH CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. 271HOWARD S. WRIGHT
CONSTRUCTION CO. 83GARY C. WYATT GENERAL
CONTRACTOR 371THE YATES COS. INC. 25ZACHRY CONSTRUCTION CORP. 34
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this growth in demand, rising construction costs from energy,materials and labor are halting construction of some publicschools because municipalities cannot afford them or do nothave the capacity to raise taxes, says Esposito.
In the residential market, which has been growing for years,analysts say rising interest rates may finally be taking a toll. Thehousing market slowed to a modest 2.5% growth rate thisspring. In south Florida and Las Vegas, developers are shelvingcondominium plans due to lagging unit sales. Yet in urban areaslike New York City, vacancy rates are dropping and high-rise,multi-use buildings are in demand as urban populations swell,Makes says.
New storm-readiness codes implemented this year in hurri-cane-vulnerable areas along the Gulf Coast will spur residentialconstruction. Contractors and subcontractors in the Gulf Coastregion already are awash in work in the wake of last year’sstorms, says Robert Van Cleave, Centex Construction’s chair-man and CEO. But many are bracing for cost escalation inmaterials and limited labor resources as construction ramps upin hurricane-hit areas. Contractors in the Gulf region witnessedan increase in PVC pipe prices in the past year due to the dis-rupted supply chain for natural gas used in the manufacturingprocess. Record petroleum prices over the past year also havedriven up costs for asphalt, while costs for steel and cement areclimbing with overseas demand, says Michele Halickman, amaterials analyst for Washington, D.C.-based economic fore-casting firm Global Insight.
In terms of percentage growth, Makes says that the $15-bil-lion-a-year amusement-and-entertainment market sector topsthe list. Significant demand for art museums and sports facili-ties are pushing the expansion, he adds.
New security requirements at terminals are driving activityin the aviation market. Contractors expect retrofit work fromnew federal rules mandating the integration of package screen-ing and conveyor systems that deliver cargo directly to aircraft.And as some airlines report their first profits in years, construc-tion executives expect to see growth in the sector.
A greater awareness of energy and the life-cycle cost of abuilding are creating a demand for sustainable, or “green,”design, executives say. Rising petroleum costs are also forcingprojects to focus on sustainability as a means to mitigate futureoperating costs. “That’s the biggest trend we see now,” saysEsposito. “Sustainability has become a lot more prevalent, andprobably half of our clients want to talk about it. It’s both a busi-
Health Care, Education Fuel GrowthBut Labor Shortages Cloud OutlookGreen building gains momentum as owners seek sustainability
While general building is still booming in nearly everymarket sector, growth in residential constructionhas lost its vigor in recent months as interest ratesmount. Rising material and energy costs coupled
with labor shortages also will present hurdles in the near future,as construction firms start adapting to the demand for “green”building, industry executives say.
A strong economy, accessible capital and a growing popula-tion are contributing to much of the growth, especially in healthcare and education, says Nicholas Makes, senior vice presidentand portfolio director for Turner Construction Corp., Dallas.“Money and capital is available to build buildings in general,”he says.
The health care industry is pushing much of the construc-tion this year. The demand is due largely to an aging popula-tion of baby boomers. Consolidation, seismic retrofits andemerging medical technologies that need specialized facilitiesare also fueling sector growth. “Right now, there’s a consolida-tion of hospitals because some smaller facilities can’t survive ontheir own,” says Ralph Esposito, national business developer forBovis Lend Lease, New York City, which is building the $750-million Heart Institute for New York Presbyterian Hospital inManhattan. “In addition, the more specialized practices at hos-pitals, such as children’s pediatrics and heart and cardiovascularmedicine, have led to a demand for very sophisticated facilities.The specialization and consolidation means new buildings andprojects for designers and contractors.” The growth in demandfor health care is in parallel to university investment in new andexpanded medical facilities, such as the Mayo Clinic in Jack-sonville, Fla., built by Dallas-based Centex Construction.
Higher education in general is providing ample work forconstruction firms this year. As the number of college studentsannually increase by the millions, universities are building bil-lions of dollars’ worth of new dorms, classrooms and researchfacilities to attract and maintain students. Third-party financ-ing, such as campus partnerships with private industry, also areleading to new research and technology facilities.
Big BusinessK-12 education is big business, especially in California, Arizona,Florida and Texas, where a growing number of Latin Americanimmigrants and overall population increases are pushing theneed for more schools, says Johan Karlstrom, executive vicepresident of Skanska USA Inc., Whitestone, N.Y. But despite
General BuildingBy Carrie McGourty
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36 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � October 2006 enr.com
roof in a 14,000-gallon reclamation tank for use in air condi-tioning and irrigation. The floors and ceiling tiles are manufac-tured using recycled materials. The building saves energy withradiant floors and exterior glass coating, allowing natural light
ness and moral venture.” One such project is the Hearst Corp.building in New York City, a $500-million tower completedearlier this year by Turner Construction. The 597-foot towerhas redefined the New York skyline with its faceted “diagrid”structure, which contains approximately 20% less steel thanconventional steel construction. It also collects rainwater on the
General Building
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Panattoni Construction Inc. 388.5
2 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 268.0
3 Opus Group 249.8
4 Clayco 235.5
5 The Conlan Co. 232.0
6 Oltmans Construction Co. 225.0
7 Ryan Cos. US Inc. 144.0
8 The Korte Co. 137.2
9 BUCON Inc. (Butler Construction) 120.4
10 FCL Builders Inc. 106.1
11 The McShane Cos. 82.5
12 Gray Construction 79.3
13 The Walsh Group Ltd. 68.1
14 T.W. Frierson Contractor Inc. 59.7
15 John S. Clark Co. LLC 56.0
16 Walton Construction Co. LLC 54.0
17 Messer Construction 53.5
18 The Norwood Co. 45.5
19 The Facility Group 45.0
20 Kinsley Construction Inc. 43.9*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 20 in Distribution And Warehouses
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bovis Lend Lease 2,036.4
2 The Yates Cos. Inc. 600.9
3 Suffolk Construction Co. Inc. 588.4
4 Swinerton Inc. 445.0
5 HRH Construction LLC 430.0
6 Hunt Building Co. Ltd. 409.0
7 J.E. Dunn Construction Group 390.0
8 Centex 371.3
9 The Turner Corp. 354.0
10 Kraft Construction Co. Inc. 352.7
11 Opus Group 328.5
12 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 293.0
13 Hawaiian Dredging Construction Co. Inc. 288.0
14 James McHugh Construction Co. 271.8
15 Gotham Construction Co. LLC 267.8
16 The Walsh Group Ltd. 257.4
17 Structure Tone Inc. 255.0
18 Brasfield & Gorrie LLC 210.9
19 Winter Park Construction Co. 194.0
20 Perini Corp. 175.0
21 The Weitz Co. LLC 167.6
22 Harkins Builders Inc. 165.0
23 Sukut Construction Inc. 162.0
24 The Hanover Co. 155.0
25 Marnell Corrao Associates Inc. 151.3
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in Multi-Unit Residential
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Centex 12,901.1
2 The Turner Corp. 6,245.4
3 Bovis Lend Lease 3,744.3
4 Skanska USA Inc. 3,151.9
5 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 2,372.0
6 J.E. Dunn Construction Group 2,265.0
7 Gilbane Building Co. 2,254.5
8 Clark Group 2,213.0
9 Structure Tone Inc. 1,954.0
10 Swinerton Inc. 1,830.0
11 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 1,826.0
12 Fluor Corp. 1,729.7
13 McCarthy Building Cos. Inc. 1,602.0
14 Webcor Builders 1,563.4
15 Brasfield & Gorrie LLC 1,487.5
16 Hensel Phelps Construction Co. 1,459.2
17 Hunt Construction Group Inc. 1,442.0
18 The Yates Cos. Inc. 1,370.7
19 Perini Corp. 1,299.0
20 The Weitz Co. LLC 1,070.9
21 Suffolk Construction Co. Inc. 1,027.6
22 Opus Group 988.1
23 M.A. Mortenson Co. 982.9
24 Manhattan Construction Co. 874.6
25 The Walsh Group Ltd. 804.8
26 Barton Malow Co. 792.2
27 Pepper Construction Group 777.8
28 Kraus-Anderson Construction Co. 762.0
29 Ryan Cos. US Inc. 745.0
30 ValleyCrest Cos. 730.0
31 Duke Construction 698.0
32 Walton Construction Co. LLC 668.0
33 The Flintco Cos. Inc. 654.0
34 Dick Construction Co. 614.0
35 Parsons 607.7
36 DPR Construction Inc. 587.6
37 Marnell Corrao Assoc. 580.4
38 BBL Construction Services LLC 577.5
39 James G. Davis Construction Corp. 550.7
40 Hoffman Corp. 549.0
41 The Beck Group 545.8
42 Weis Builders Inc. 542.1
43 Panattoni Construction Inc. 541.4
44 HITT Contracting Inc. 528.7
45 HRH Construction LLC 528.0
46 Howard S. Wright Construction Co. 526.5
47 Power Construction Co. 515.0
48 VCC 510.0
49 Kitchell Corp. 499.3
50 Shawmut Design and Construction 497.8
*BASED ON 2005 CONTRACTING REVENUE FROM TRANSPORTATION AS REPORTED IN ENR’S SURVEY OF LEADING CONTRACTORS AND DESIGN FIRMS.
The Top 50 in General Building
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the U.S. qualify for certification in its LEED (Leadership inEnergy and Environmental Design) program, but 4,000 morecurrently are under construction. In the residential sector, theNational Association of Home Builders reports a 20% increasein homebuilders focused on sustainable construction. By 2010,
in while keeping heat out.
Growing FastThe U.S. Green Building Council says about 500 buildings in
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Hunt Construction Group Inc. 500.0
2 The Turner Corp. 213.4
3 Weis Builders Inc. 200.7
4 M.A. Mortenson Co. 71.2
5 Barton Malow Co. 55.0
6 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 51.0
7 The Flintco Cos. Inc. 50.5
8 Bovis Lend Lease 46.2
9 Manhattan Construction Co. 35.3
10 J.E. Dunn Construction Group 29.0
11 L.F. Driscoll Co. 25.5
12 Shawmut Design and Construction 23.7
13 The Yates Cos. Inc. 22.5
14 The Walsh Group Ltd. 20.1
17 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 20.0
15 Lee Lewis Construction Inc. 20.0
16 HRH Construction LLC 20.0
18 Skanska USA Inc. 19.5
19 Plant Construction Co. LP 19.0
20 Kiewit Corp. 18.6
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 20 in Sports
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 The Turner Corp. 1,503.2
2 Gilbane Building Co. 1,110.3
3 Skanska USA Inc. 903.3
4 Barton Malow Co. 550.1
5 douglas e. barnhart 423.7
6 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 371.0
7 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 362.0
8 McCarthy Building Cos. Inc. 347.0
9 Hensel Phelps Construction Co. 318.6
10 Centex 291.9
11 Hunt Construction Group Inc. 275.0
12 J.E. Dunn Construction Group 260.0
13 FTR International Inc. 235.0
14 Manhattan Construction Co. 231.9
15 CORE Construction Group 221.2
16 The Boldt Co. 211.1
17 S.J. Amoroso Construction Co. Inc. 210.5
18 Lee Lewis Construction Inc. 206.0
19 Adolfson & Peterson Construction 204.0
20 Swinerton Inc. 201.0
21 EDGE Development Inc. 200.0
22 Roebbelen Contracting Inc. 198.0
23 Structure Tone Inc. 191.0
24 The Flintco Cos. Inc. 183.9
25 Charter Builders Ltd. 182.2
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in Education
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 The Turner Corp. 213.0
2 Centex 174.0
3 Parsons 170.2
4 Hensel Phelps Construction Co. 145.5
5 Gilbane Building Co. 138.1
6 Dick Construction Co. 67.0
7 Bernards 60.5
8 Moss & Associates LLC 55.5
9 The Flintco Cos. Inc. 55.0
10 Keating Building Corp. 36.3
11 P.J. Dick-Trumbull-Lindy 34.0
12 Okland Construction 31.5
13 J.E. Dunn Construction Group 31.0
14 Ajax Building Corp. 28.0
15 Hoffman Construction Co. 25.6
16 Clark & Sullivan Construction 25.0
17 Sletten Cos. 18.1
18 Absher Construction Co. 18.0
19 Kitchell Corp. 17.7
20 S.J. Amoroso Construction Co. Inc. 17.0
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 20 in Correction Facilities
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Perini Corp. 588.0
2 Hunt Construction Group Inc. 320.0
3 The Penta Building Group Inc. 285.3
4 The Turner Corp. 266.4
5 WELBRO Building Corp. 255.0
6 Swinerton Inc. 248.0
7 McCarthy Building Cos. Inc. 159.0
8 Hensel Phelps Construction Co. 156.6
9 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 128.0
10 Bovis Lend Lease 126.9
11 Skanska USA Inc. 121.5
12 The Walsh Group Ltd. 118.6
13 Suffolk Construction Co. Inc. 114.3
14 Matt Construction Corp. 114.0
15 Structure Tone Inc. 109.0
16 Walton Construction Co. LLC 108.0
17 The Yates Cos. Inc. 102.8
18 GE Johnson Construction Co. 90.0
19 B.L. Harbert International 89.7
20 M.A. Mortenson Co. 89.3
21 Gilbane Building Co. 77.9
22 Shaw Construction 77.6
23 Kraemer Brothers LLC 75.8
24 Moss & Associates LLC 71.9
25 Kitchell Corp. 69.6
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in Hotels, MotelsAnd Convention Centers
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General Building
between $29 billion and $57 billion a year will be spent on greenbuilding, up from $11 billion in 2006, NAHB says.
Demand is up in nearly every market sector, but there is con-cern about the shortages of people in construction crafts, man-agement and professions. “There’s a war going on for talent, toreally find the most talented people,” says Karlstrom. Labordemand will deepen as rebuilding begins for hurricane-strickenregions, causing contractors and owners to anticipate missedproject deadlines and increased costs, industry sources say.“Labor is going to be a major challenge for the industry in thefuture,” says Karlstrom. �
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Jacobsen Construction Co. Inc. 123.1
2 J.E. Dunn Construction Group 88.0
3 The Turner Corp. 81.2
4 Frederick Quinn Corp. 73.2
5 McGough Cos. 60.9
6 Pepper Construction Group 60.7
7 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 56.0
8 Brasfield & Gorrie LLC 52.7
9 Okland Construction 52.0
10 Skanska USA Inc. 47.1
11 Manhattan Construction Co. 46.1
12 Kiewit Corp. 44.0
13 Structure Tone Inc. 36.0
14 Clancy & Theys Construction Co. 28.6
15 Hoffman Construction Co. 26.6
16 Walbridge Aldinger 26.0
17 American Constructors Inc. 25.0
18 L.F. Driscoll Co. 22.6
19 Rentenbach Engineering Co. 22.3
20 C. Overaa & Co. 21.9
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 20 in Religious and Cultural
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Fluor Corp. 1,640.5
2 Hensel Phelps Construction Co. 340.4
3 Skanska USA Inc. 309.0
4 KBR 240.0
5 Caddell Construction Co. Inc. 224.7
6 Dick Construction Co. 177.0
7 Bovis Lend Lease 170.0
8 Fru-Con Construction 158.4
9 The Turner Corp. 156.3
10 Manhattan Construction Co. 152.2
11 Gilbane Building Co. 151.4
12 Grunley Construction Co. Inc. 150.8
13 B.L. Harbert International 145.3
14 Weston Solutions Inc. 138.2
15 Suffolk Construction Co. Inc. 131.5
16 Day & Zimmermann Group 131.0
17 J.E. Dunn Construction Group 125.0
18 M.A. Mortenson Co. 117.0
19 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 115.0
20 Zachry Construction Corp. 90.7
21 The Shaw Group Inc. 90.1
22 Clark & Sullivan Construction 83.0
23 Fontaine Bros. Inc. 81.0
24 P.J. Dick-Trumbull-Lindy 80.0
25 James G. Davis Construction Corp. 78.2
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in Government Offices
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 The Turner Corp. 1,732.4
2 Structure Tone Inc. 1,197.0
3 James G. Davis Construction Corp. 408.1
4 J.E. Dunn Construction Group 379.0
5 Skanska USA Inc. 320.5
6 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 301.0
7 Brasfield & Gorrie LLC 269.9
8 Clayco 235.5
9 Swinerton Inc. 210.0
10 Ryan Cos. US Inc. 207.0
11 The Weitz Co. LLC 197.0
12 Holder Construction Co. 195.9
13 Sellen Construction Co. Inc. 191.5
14 Centex 188.2
15 Opus Group 187.1
16 Lauth Group Inc. 182.1
17 Bovis Lend Lease 178.5
18 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 178.0
19 Pepper Construction Group 168.5
20 Gilbane Building Co. 164.3
21 Lusardi Construction Co. 161.0
22 DPR Construction Inc. 155.6
23 Austin Industries 155.3
24 Kiewit Corp. 135.9
25 M.A. Mortenson Co. 130.4
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in Commercial Offices
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General Building
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 715.0
2 VCC 420.1
3 EMJ Corp. 374.1
4 Skanska USA Inc. 288.2
5 S.D. Deacon Corp. 258.5
6 CDI Contractors LLC 242.0
7 Lee Lewis Construction Inc. 226.0
8 Cleveland Construction Inc. 225.0
9 Weis Builders Inc. 217.6
10 McGough Cos. 204.0
11 Swinerton Inc. 203.0
12 The Weitz Co. LLC 176.3
13 Ryan Cos. US Inc. 176.0
14 Hoar Construction LLC 175.3
15 Parsons 173.7
16 Rockford Construction Co. Inc. 160.0
17 O’Neil Industries, Inc. 156.9
18 The Yates Cos. Inc. 156.0
19 Walton Construction Co. LLC 153.0
20 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 152.0
21 John S. Clark Co. LLC 151.6
22 Pepper Construction Group 149.3
23 Kraus-Anderson Construction Co. 142.0
24 White-Spunner Construction Inc. 130.0
25 Opus Group 128.2
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in Retail
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Marnell Corrao Associates Inc. 364.8
2 The Yates Cos. Inc. 238.8
3 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 178.0
4 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 174.0
5 Swinerton Inc. 160.0
6 Gilbane Building Co. 140.6
7 Brasfield & Gorrie LLC 137.6
8 The Weitz Co. LLC 123.3
9 Hensel Phelps Construction Co. 110.8
10 The Turner Corp. 108.0
11 T.N. Ward Co. 93.4
12 Roy Anderson Corp 88.5
13 Manhattan Construction Co. 85.6
14 BE&K Inc. 76.2
15 Joseph Jingoli & Son Inc. 70.0
16 C.W. Driver 63.6
17 DPR Construction Inc. 60.0
18 The Flintco Cos. Inc. 59.9
19 Big-D Corp. 58.0
20 Perini Corp. 56.0
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 20 in EntertainmentRANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 The Turner Corp. 1,500.7
2 Skanska USA Inc. 906.3
3 McCarthy Building Cos. Inc. 889.0
4 Bovis Lend Lease 828.3
5 J.E. Dunn Construction Group 777.0
6 Brasfield & Gorrie LLC 563.0
7 M.A. Mortenson Co. 414.6
8 The Robins & Morton Group 383.0
9 Gilbane Building Co. 368.2
10 Swinerton Inc. 363.0
11 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 356.0
12 Hunt Construction Group Inc. 325.0
13 Kitchell Corp. 274.1
14 The Weitz Co. LLC 266.3
15 Hoffman Construction Co. 264.1
16 Parsons 251.3
17 Centex 238.4
18 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 238.0
19 DPR Construction Inc. 223.2
20 The Flintco Cos. Inc. 219.3
21 Pepper Construction Group 214.7
22 Kraus-Anderson Construction Co. 212.0
23 Manhattan Construction Co. 196.3
24 L.F. Driscoll Co. 194.6
25 Barton Malow Co. 165.0
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in Health Care
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enr.com October 2006 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � 45
between Biloxi and Ocean Springs, Miss., and a second, 800-ftbridge to span over the CSX Railroad. The six-lane structurewill soar 95 ft over the bay and replace a low-lying four-lanebridge destroyed by Katrina. Two lanes of the bridge will openby late 2007, with completion slated for spring 2008.
Federal funding is fueling the transportation market. Dur-ing the years when the transportation bill languished, stateDOTs were reluctant to proceed with multiyear projects due tothe uncertainty surrounding long-term federal funding, saysDon Sollie, a regional vice president at Atlanta-based APAC.“That reluctance has disappeared,” he says.
Still, Sollie is concerned. “The cost of basic materials hasgone up dramatically in the past 18 months,” driving up the costof individual projects, he says. “The price of liquid asphalt hasgone through the roof” due to the rise in world oil prices, hesays. Higher delivery costs have pushed aggregate prices high-er. “And we all know what’s happened to steel,” he says.
Mac Cianchette, senior vice president at Cianbro Corp.,Pittsfield, Maine, concurs, adding that delays by state DOTs inawarding badly needed bridge-rehabilitation projects are mak-ing those jobs even more costly than initially estimated. “We’refinding that on a lot of our projects the repairs that are neededare much more extensive than what the original contracts calledfor,” primarily because of the deterioration that occurred dur-ing the years when award of contracts was delayed, Cianchettesays.
Tax FactsWhile higher material costs and project delays are driving upcontract bottom lines, the revenue received by state DOTs fromfuel taxes and other sources to fund new projects “has not beenrising,” Sollie says. “That means that the number of jobs [DOTscan award] is likely to be lower” than what they had been antic-ipating. Sollie worries that lawmakers in general “don’t have thepolitical will” to raise state fuel taxes, a step that he and mostother transportation contractors say is required to deal with ris-ing prices and the need to improve the nation’s deterioratinginfrastructure. In 2005 and so far in 2006, six states—Georgia,North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Washington, West Virginia andWisconsin—have raised fuel taxes, mostly because of automat-ic inflation-related adjustments, according to the AmericanRoad and Transportation Builders Association.
But the trend is toward capping or even reducing state fuel-tax revenue, say industry observers. For instance, Wisconsin
Federal Funds Fuel Booming MarketBut Materials Costs Squeeze BudgetsRising asphalt, steel and concrete prices may limit future projects
The U.S. construction market’s transportation sector isrunning on all cylinders, fueled, among other things, bya growing economy and an injection of billions of fed-eral dollars.
Most companies that build and repair highways, bridges,mass transit and other rail projects, airports, ports and othermarine facilities report that business in each of those specialtiesis good—great in some cases. They note, however, that pricesfor many basic construction materials are soaring, and that qual-ified labor is hard to come by in some markets.
Highway and bridge contractors are concerned that, withstate lawmakers unwilling to raise fuel taxes to keep pace withrising prices, the number of projects put out to bid will declineas state department of transportation budgets are squeezed.
Transportation construction activity in the U.S. “is verystrong now, and I see it staying strong for the next five to sev-en years,” says Michael Lembo, senior vice president at White-stone, New York-based Skanska USA Civil. His optimism isbased on pent-up demand for new infrastructure, the influx offederal money tied to the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks,the federal transportation bill signed into law by President Bushlast year and Hurricane Katrina.
For example, Lembo points to federal 9/11 funds support-ing the construction of the new World Trade Center trans-portation hub designed by Santiago Calatrava. Skanska and Flu-or are the lead partners in a team called Phoenix Constructorsthat earlier this year was awarded a $1.1-billion contract tobuild the visually stunning project, which includes new rail andpedestrian tunnels, train platforms and mezzanines.
The federal transportation bill, in turn, freed up funding forGeorgia DOT’s June award of a $199-million contract to Skan-ska to reconstruct and widen more than five miles of Interstate95 near the Georgia-Florida state line, Lembo says. The con-tract, which includes the construction of four new bridges, alsowas made possible by Georgia’s aggressive transportation fund-ing program.
Then there is Katrina, which wrecked the Gulf Coast’s trans-portation infrastructure and required a long list of major proj-ects that normally would have stretched out over a decade to beawarded, designed and built in very short order.
In June, Mississippi DOT awarded a joint venture of Par-sons, Massman Construction Co., Kiewit Southern Co. andTraylor Bros. Inc. a $339-million contract to design and builda 1.6-mile bridge to carry U.S. Route 90 over Biloxi Bay
TransportationBy Housley Carr
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Transportation
is expected to reduce annual gas-tax revenue by $450 million peryear, enough to delay award of projects.
Many say that’s probably not the end of it. Illinois legislatorsare considering capping the state’s gas tax or suspending it forseveral months, as they did in 2000. And in Massachusetts,Lieutenant Gov. Kerry Healey (R), a 2006 gubernatorial candi-date, supports legislation to suspend collection of the state’s21¢-per-gallon gas tax for three months.
Funding varies by state, and in many cases the news is good.Last year, Washington’s state Legislature approved a 16-yeartransportation improvement plan funded by a 9.5¢-per-gallonincrease in the state’s gas tax. The program guarantees fundingfor more than 270 projects, totaling $7.1 billion. Colorado,Florida and Georgia also have strong programs. California, thenation’s largest transportation construction market, “has quite abit of money in the pipeline for future bridge projects,” saysRichard McCall, area manager at MCM Construction, Inc.,North Highlands, Calif. MCM recently started work on a$65.7-million project to relocate a slide-prone portion of U.S.Route 101 in Mendocino County. “I’m very optimistic aboutthe next five years,” says McCall, and probably for good reason.
In November, California voters will consider Proposition1B, a $19.9-billion transportation bond issue. If approved, thebond issue will provide $4.5 billion for congestion relief proj-ects, $4 billion for mass transit and $3.1 billion for seaports, landports and airports. It will also provide $2 billion for California’sfive-year State Transportation Improvement Program, $2 bil-
Gov. Jim Doyle (D) last December signed a bill that will endthe state’s automatic, inflation-adjusted annual increase in thestate’s fuel tax starting in April 2007. In May, New York Gov.George Pataki (R) signed a bill that as of June 1 capped NewYork’s adjustable gas tax at 8¢ per gallon, the level at which itwould typically have been if gas cost only $2 per gallon. The cap
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bechtel 3,878.0
2 Kiewit Corp. 1,998.8
3 APAC 1,963.0
4 Granite Construction Inc. 1,621.4
5 The Walsh Group Ltd. 1,116.9
6 The Lane Construction Corp. 914.8
7 Skanska USA Inc. 830.7
8 Balfour Beatty Construction Inc. 619.0
9 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 595.0
10 Williams Brothers Construction Co. 567.9
11 Austin Industries 554.8
12 Fluor Corp. 502.5
13 Jacobs 464.5
14 Clark Group 444.0
15 The Hubbard Group 403.9
16 Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Corp. LLC 374.2
17 Washington Group International 368.0
18 Zachry Construction Corp. 356.6
19 Tutor-Saliba Corp. 356.0
20 Flatiron Construction 354.8
21 Vecellio Group Inc. 351.0
22 Weeks Marine Inc. 329.2
23 Fred Weber Inc. 300.5
24 Edward Kraemer & Sons Inc. 293.0
25 Hensel Phelps Construction Co. 291.7
26 The Turner Corp. 281.9
27 Parsons 276.5
28 Kokosing Construction Co. Inc. 272.7
29 Ames Construction Inc. 268.4
30 American Infrastructure Inc. 267.3
31 Clarkson Construction Co. 257.0
32 American Bridge Co. 251.6
33 Cardi Corp. 250.0
34 Perini Corp. 236.0
35 Herzog Contracting Corp. 234.0
36 Lunda Construction Co. 232.6
37 Barnhill Contracting Co. 232.0
38 Hunt Construction Group Inc. 230.0
39 Boh Bros. Construction Co. LLC 225.0
40 New Enterprise Stone & Lime 224.1
41 Staker & Parson Cos. 214.2
42 P.J. Dick-Trumbull-Lindy 214.0
43 Rieth-Riley Construction Co. Inc. 202.7
44 Angelo Iafrate Cos. 194.0
45 Anderson Columbia Co. Inc. 192.0
46 J.D. Abrams LP 184.9
47 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 181.0
48 Manson Construction Co. 178.0
49 Orion Marine Group 167.0
50 FNF Construction 161.2
*BASED ON 2005 CONTRACTING REVENUE FROM TRANSPORTATION AS REPORTED IN ENR’S SURVEY OF LEADING CONTRACTORS AND DESIGN FIRMS.
The Top 50 in Transportation
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Kiewit Corp. 607.2
2 The Walsh Group Ltd. 353.7
3 Skanska USA Inc. 350.2
4 Edward Kraemer & Sons Inc. 247.0
5 Flatiron Construction 233.1
6 Lunda Construction Co. 232.6
7 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 223.0
8 American Bridge Co. 181.8
9 Austin Industries 181.0
10 Jacobs 150.1
11 Granite Construction Inc. 134.0
12 Cianbro Corp. 80.4
13 Superior Construction Co. Inc. 79.2
14 The Lane Construction Corp. 75.0
15 Corman Construction Inc. 69.0
16 Traylor Bros. Inc. 67.0
17 J.D. Abrams LP 64.7
18 Fru-Con Construction 61.2
19 Vecellio Group Inc. 61.0
20 Kokosing Construction Co. Inc. 60.5
21 Bechtel 59.0
22 James McHugh Construction Co. 56.1
23 Perini Corp. 53.0
24 P.J. Dick-Trumbull-Lindy 45.0
25 The Hubbard Group 40.4
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in Bridges
lion to improve local roads and $1 billion for enhancements toState Route 99.
Rails and RunwaysMass transit and freight rail projects continue to receive strongfunding as well. The World Trade Center transportation hubproject that Skanska, Fluor and their partners are building is oneof several multibillion-dollar transit jobs under development inand around New York City, says Lembo.
Others include New Jersey Transit’s proposed Trans-Hud-son Express Tunnel under the Hudson River, Long Island RailRoad’s planned extension within Manhattan and New YorkCity’s long-awaited Second Avenue subway line. Smaller tran-sit systems, including those in Dallas, Denver and Portland,Ore., also have planned line extensions.
Amtrak is rebuilding its heavily used Northeast Corridor,which includes a complicated, $76-million job performed byCianbro involving replacement of Amtrak’s 87-year-oldThames River bascule lift span between New London and Gro-ton, Conn. “The new bridge will be placed in operation duringthe winter of 2007-08,” says Cianchette.
Prospects for the ports sector remains strong as well. SouthCarolina State Ports Authority is planning two major projects:a $600-million, three-berth container terminal on 280 acres atthe former Charleston Naval Complex and a future port facili-ty on 1,800 acres along the Savannah River in Jasper County.
Airports are also proceeding with major projects. Tutor-Sal-iba Corp., Sylmar, Calif., in July started work on a $242-millionproject at Los Angeles International Airport. The first phaseinvolves moving an 11,000-ft runway 55 ft to the south. Thesecond phase involves building a 10,000-ft taxiway between thetwo runways. Projects planned at other major airports includeChicago’s O’Hare, whose modernization program, approvedlast September, will modify O’Hare’s runway configuration toreduce delays and increase capacity. �
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Granite Construction Inc. 1,128.2
2 Kiewit Corp. 801.7
3 The Lane Construction Corp. 710.5
4 The Walsh Group Ltd. 597.4
5 The Hubbard Group 363.5
6 Zachry Construction Corp. 308.9
7 Bechtel 306.0
8 Fluor Corp. 261.6
9 American Infrastructure Inc. 260.3
10 Jacobs 246.8
11 Barnhill Contracting Co. 232.0
12 Vecellio Group Inc. 230.0
13 Washington Group International 220.0
14 New Enterprise Stone & Lime 201.9
15 Rieth-Riley Construction Co. Inc. 191.0
16 Skanska USA Inc. 187.8
17 Kokosing Construction Co. Inc. 178.7
18 Ames Construction Inc. 164.7
19 P.J. Dick-Trumbull-Lindy 163.0
20 FNF Construction Inc. 139.8
21 Austin Industries 134.6
22 Teichert Construction 121.0
23 J.D. Abrams LP 120.2
24 The Yates Cos. Inc. 78.1
25 Clyde Cos. 74.0
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in Highways
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bechtel 3,181.0
2 Kiewit Corp. 313.1
3 Granite Construction Inc. 273.2
4 Fluor Corp. 240.9
5 Herzog Contracting Corp. 209.0
6 Skanska USA Inc. 184.2
7 Washington Group International 148.0
8 Ames Construction Inc. 84.7
9 Jacobs 67.6
10 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 62.0
11 Perini Corp. 57.0
12 Flatiron Construction 41.4
13 The Walsh Group Ltd. 36.3
14 The Conti Group 32.9
15 McCarthy Building Cos. Inc. 32.0
16 Tarlton Corp. 30.0
17 Jay Cashman Inc. 27.7
18 Traylor Bros. Inc. 22.0
18 The Turner Corp. 22.0
19 Hensel Phelps Construction Co. 20.1
20 D’Annunzio & Sons Inc. 20.0
21 Sundt Construction Inc. 17.0
22 Frontier-Kemper Constructors Inc. 16.3
23 Edward Kraemer & Sons Inc. 15.0
24 Parsons 8.4
25 Clancy & Theys Construction Co. 8.4
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
**TWO FIRMS WERE TIED IN REVENUE.
The Top 25 in Mass Transit and Rail**
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Transportation
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Corp. LLC 374.2
2 Weeks Marine Inc. 329.2
3 Orion Marine Group 167.0
4 Kiewit Corp. 123.2
5 American Bridge Co. 53.1
6 Zachry Construction Corp. 47.7
7 TIC Holdings Inc. 40.1
8 The Turner Corp. 37.9
9 Skanska USA Inc. 33.6
10 Fru-Con Construction 30.6
11 Kokosing Construction Co. Inc. 30.6
12 Bechtel 21.0
13 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 21.0
14 D’Annunzio & Sons Inc. 20.0
15 The Conti Group 19.2
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 15 in Marine and Port Facilities
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Transportation
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bechtel 311.0
2 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 276.0
3 Hensel Phelps Construction Co. 271.6
4 Austin Industries 237.5
5 Hunt Construction Group Inc. 230.0
6 The Turner Corp. 222.0
7 Parsons 199.8
8 Kiewit Corp. 153.6
9 The Walsh Group Ltd. 129.4
10 The Lane Construction Corp. 129.3
11 Odebrecht Construction Inc. 102.3
12 Granite Construction Inc. 85.9
13 VRH Construction Corp. 83.1
14 Centex 66.5
15 Gilbane Building Co. 62.3
16 Garco Construction Inc. 61.0
17 Skanska USA Inc. 56.9
18 Torcon Inc. 53.0
19 Walbridge Aldinger 51.0
20 Vecellio Group Inc. 50.0
21 The Layton Cos. 44.6
22 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 41.0
24 Nova Group Inc. 40.0
23 The Harper Co. 40.0
25 The Boldt Co. 25.8
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in Airports
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Manufacturing/Industrial Process
Growth Accelerates Across SectorsAmid Strong Consumer DemandConstruction investments surge as owners expand and consolidate
One of the fastest-growing industrial process markets isethanol production. Ethanol projects are sprouting up follow-ing passage of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, which containeda Renewable Fuels Standard that will double the U.S. demandfor ethanol to at least 7.5 billion gallons a year by 2012. Accord-ing to the Renewable Fuels Association, there currently are 36new ethanol biorefineries under construction in the U.S. andseven undergoing expansions. “There are so many ethanol proj-ects out there that we don’t know how to handle them all,” saysDennis Schroeder, president of Birmingham, Ala.-based BE&KInc. “The main issue is, will they all go and how will they befinanced? It’s potentially a huge market.”
Cruise ControlThe auto plant sector is still rolling along, thanks largely to for-eign automakers’ U.S. investments. Greg Kozicz, president ofSt. Louis-based Alberici Corp., says the firm worked on Daim-lerChrysler and General Motors projects last year, but the sec-tor remains relatively flat. “There’s been significantly less spend-ing from the traditional North America-based manufacturers,”he says. “If there were no transplant activities, it would be adown sector.”
Throughout the sector, keeping facilities lean and flexibleremains the goal. “We’re seeing very strategic investments intheir futures,” says Doug Maibach, vice president of corporateaffairs at Southfield, Mich.-based Barton Malow Co. “For GM,it’s about survival. They are on a fast track toward driving costsout and getting efficiencies in. We’re trying to help themthrough the capital process.”
Several automakers have major capital plans in the works.Honda this year announced plans for a $400-million autoassembly plant in the Southeast, with production scheduled tobegin in 2008. Honda also has plans for a $140-million engineplant in Canada and will invest $125 million next year forexpansion of component plants in Ohio and Georgia.
In June, GM announced it will invest $500 million in itsToledo, Ohio, transmission plant, including a 400,000-sq-ftexpansion. Other investment plans include a $33-million reno-vation of its Warren Transmission Plant near Detroit and a$138-million expansion of its Lansing Grand River assemblyplant in Lansing, Mich. GM also broke ground this summer ona $650-million auto assembly plant in San Luis Potosí, Mexico.
Much of the major work in the aviation and aerospace mar-ket is centered around projects in Charleston, S.C., where
From plant expansions to the implementation of cost-sav-ing efficiencies, owners of manufacturing and industrialprocess facilities have plenty of reasons to continueinvesting in their facilities.
According to the U.S. Dept. of Commerce, constructionspending in manufacturing increased by a third between May2005 and May 2006, leaping from $29 billion to $39.8 billion.The dramatic rise outpaced all other sectors tracked by thedepartment, except lodging. Manufacturing is on the reboundafter hitting historic lows in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, ter-rorist attacks. In 2003, the value of put-in-place constructiondropped to $21.4 billion.
“In every quarter, every year, we seem to see more activitythan the previous year since 9/11 when the work in manufac-turing collapsed,” says Shannon Hines, vice president and gen-eral manager of Turner Construction Co., New York City.“Every year since then, it’s seemed to come back and we’re feel-ing that this year as well.”
And the upswing is expected to continue. Construction startsin manufacturing are forecasted to reach 78.9 million sq ft bythe end of 2006 —a 7% rise over 2005, according to McGraw-Hill Construction’s Dodge Analytics. “We expect to see startsaverage around 80 million sq ft to 90 million sq ft over the nextfive years,” says Kim Kennedy, manager of forecasting forDodge Analytics. “We should see good years in 2007 and 2008and then easing back a bit over the next three years.” ENR alsois part of McGraw-Hill Construction.
The nation’s boom in residential and commercial construc-tion is echoing through the industrial process sector. Demandfor building materials has sparked a market for gypsum wall-board and cement plants. “It’s a hot market right now across theboard,” Hines says. “The international demand is only puttingmore strain on that equation, and we’re seeing some of thatactivity as a result.”
The trend is driving work for firms active in the buildingmaterials market like Greenville, S.C.-based CH2M Hill Lock-wood Greene. The firm began construction in April of a $125-million 700,000-sq-ft gypsum wallboard manufacturing plant inGeorgetown, S.C., for American Gypsum Co. under an engi-neer-procure-construct contract. The project’s completion isscheduled for late 2007. Lockwood Greene also is designing a$900-million cement plant for Holcim Inc. in St. Genevieve,Mo., that will be one of the largest in the world when complet-ed in 2009. A contractor has not yet be selected for the job.
By Bruce Buckley
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Vought Aircraft Industries and Global Aeronautica are buildingplants to fabricate fuselages for Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner.BE&K is contractor on the project to build a 328,000-sq-ft air-craft assembly facility, and a 450,000-sq-ft fuselage productionbuilding. Both design-build, steel structures currently are underway.
In pharmaceuticals, some large players like Pfizer and Merck have slowed expenditures, but the pipeline is filling up,says Phil Southerland, corporate executive vice president atSkanska USA Inc., Whitestone, N.Y. “We’ve seen $5 billion to$6 billion worth of new projects that have surfaced in the lastfew months and matured to the point where they are movingforward,” he says.
While Puerto Rico, Ireland and Singapore continue to woopharmaceutical companies with incentives, Southerland saysthere are several U.S.-based projects currently under way. InJune, Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. announced that it will build abulk biologics manufacturing facility in Devens, Mass. The$660-million project started in September and will be complet-ed in 2009. In January, Amgen announced plans to invest $1billion in its facilities in Cork, Ireland, and $1 billion over thenext four years in its Puerto Rico facilities. The firm also willexpand facilities in San Francisco, Seattle and Cambridge, Mass.
There is strong activity in the food-and-beverage market,driven largely by companies trying to penetrate markets abroad,contractors say. Domestically, Triumph Foods this yearannounced plans for a $130-million pork processing plant in
Manufacturing/Industrial Process
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Fluor Corp. 560.1
2 Walbridge Aldinger 543.0
3 Alberici Corp. 452.7
4 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 236.0
5 The Yates Cos. Inc. 198.1
6 Hoffman Corp. 198.0
7 HK Systems Inc. 170.7
8 The Rudolph/Libbe Cos. Inc. 167.7
9 CB&I 167.0
10 Commercial Contracting Corp. 156.0
11 Barton Malow Co. 154.0
12 Graycor 154.0
13 Jacobs 148.1
14 The Haskell Co. 136.4
15 Gray Construction 128.5
16 M+W Zander US Operations Inc. 127.0
17 Skanska USA Inc. 123.7
18 Washington Group International 113.0
19 The Alter Group 107.0
20 CH2M HILL Cos. 105.3
21 Devcon Construction Inc. 100.0
22 Global Performance 95.2
23 BE&K Inc. 83.5
24 The Turner Corp. 70.1
25 Anderson Columbia Co. Inc. 70.0
*BASED ON 2005 CONTRACTING REVENUE FROM MANUFACTURING AS REPORTED IN ENR’S SURVEY OF LEADING CONTRACTORS AND DESIGN FIRMS.
The Top 25 in Manufacturing
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 BE&K Inc. 74.3
2 Jacobs 65.1
3 O’Neil Industries Inc. 41.9
4 Burns & McDonnell 23.8
5 The Haskell Co. 16.6
6 McCarthy Building Cos. Inc. 16.0
7 Kiewit Corp. 11.9
8 Gray Construction 9.0
9 CH2M HILL Cos. 8.6
10 O&G Industries Inc. 5.5
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 10 in Aerospace
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Walbridge Aldinger 543.0
2 Alberici Corp. 451.2
3 The Yates Cos. Inc. 169.6
4 Commercial Contracting Corp. 156.0
5 Barton Malow Co. 154.0
6 Gray Construction 119.4
7 Global Performance 95.2
8 Washington Group International 91.8
9 Jacobs 45.5
10 The Turner Corp. 38.4
11 The Haskell Co. 31.0
12 The McShane Cos. 27.5
13 The Boldt Co. 26.4
14 Denham-Blythe Co. Inc. 24.2
15 McCarthy Building Cos. Inc. 21.0
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 15 in Auto Plants
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 224.0
2 Hoffman Construction Co. 196.0
3 Fluor Corp. 144.0
4 M+W Zander US Operations Inc. 127.0
5 Skanska USA Inc. 123.7
6 Pizzagalli Construction 52.0
7 CH2M HILL Cos. 43.7
8 Jacobs 37.5
9 Hensel Phelps Construction Co. 32.7
10 DPR Construction Inc. 27.7
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 10 in Semiconductors
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Fluor Corp. 407.6
2 The Haskell Co. 63.8
3 The Turner Corp. 31.7
4 Kiewit Corp. 19.8
5 Washington Group International 16.2
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 5 in Electronic Assembly
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East Moline, Mo. Construction of the 620,000-sq-ft facility willbegin next spring, with occupancy by 2009. Barilla Americabegan work in June on an $87.7-million pasta-making facilityin Avon, N.Y., scheduled for completion in mid-2007. Hinessays Turner last year had multiple projects for poultry process-ing clients such as Gold Kist, Fieldale Farms and WaynesFarms. “It can be a cyclical market,” he says. “It was extremelyhot for us in 2005 and 2006 but seems to have tapered offrecently. There are signs though of potentially coming back.”
The semiconductor market is highlighted by Samsung Elec-tronics Cos.’ 1.2-million-sq-ft, 300-mm wafer fabrication plantproject in Austin, Texas. The $3.5-billion Austin Fab 2 plant willbe one of the largest semiconductor plants in the world whenfinished in fall 2007. Samsung Engineering and Constructionand Greeley, Colo.-based Hensel Phelps Construction are gen-eral contractors on the project.
In pulp and paper, Schroeder says annual capital spendingdropped from nearly $15 billion a decade ago to about $3 bil-lion today. With about 25% of BE&K’s revenue coming fromsuch projects, Schroeder says the company is banking on long-standing relationships with companies like International Paperand Weyerhaeuser to keep the work flowing. Projects to stream-line processes and make facilities leaner and more efficient aredriving the sector’s construction activity. “Most of the projectsthese days are cost-reduction projects,” Schroeder says.
Overall, many industry observers say the manufacturing andindustrial process sectors are firing on all cylinders and will
Manufacturing/Industrial Process
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Fluor Corp. 1,790.2
2 Jacobs 1,015.2
3 Bechtel 742.0
4 Skanska USA Inc. 660.3
5 BE&K Inc. 526.7
6 Fagen Inc. 395.3
7 The Turner Corp. 282.6
8 Foster Wheeler Ltd. 258.0
9 TIC Holdings Inc. 257.2
10 The Stellar Group 250.3
11 Gilbane Building Co. 237.6
12 DPR Construction Inc. 230.5
13 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 200.0
14 Fru-Con Construction Corp. 181.7
15 Torcon Inc. 177.0
16 Aker Kvaerner 171.7
17 F.A. Wilhelm Construction Co. Inc. 160.0
18 The Haskell Co. 135.1
19 CCC Group Inc. 134.5
20 Washington Group International 133.4
21 Industrial Contractors Inc. 118.4
22 S&B Holdings Ltd. and Affiliates 100.5
23 Ames Construction Inc. 100.3
24 Bovis Lend Lease 96.9
25 Klinger Cos. Inc. 95.0
*BASED ON 2005 CONTRACTING REVENUE FROM INDUSTRIAL PROCESS AS REPORTED IN ENR’S SURVEY OF LEADING CONTRACTORS AND DESIGN FIRMS.
The Top 25 in Industrial Process
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Fluor Corp. 887.9
2 Bechtel 652.0
3 TIC Holdings Inc. 195.8
4 Aker Kvaerner 147.6
5 Ames Construction Inc. 100.3
6 CCC Group Inc. 96.5
7 Kokosing Construction Co. Inc. 60.1
8 H+M Co. Inc. 23.5
9 Brasfield & Gorrie LLC 22.3
10 Industrial Contractors Inc. 16.3*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 10 in Steel andNonferrous Metal Plants
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Jacobs 660.5
2 Skanska USA Inc. 660.3
3 Fluor Corp. 648.8
4 Gilbane Building Co. 237.6
5 The Turner Corp. 224.6
6 DPR Construction Inc. 224.1
7 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 184.0
8 Torcon Inc. 177.0
9 F.A. Wilhelm Construction Co., Inc. 152.4
10 Foster Wheeler Ltd. 115.0
11 Bovis Lend Lease 96.6
12 BMW Constructors Inc. 83.3
13 Structure Tone Inc. 76.0
14 Washington Group International 63.0
15 BE&K Inc. 50.0
16 CRB Builders 39.5
17 Shiel Sexton Co. Inc. 29.0
18 Hunt Construction Group Inc. 28.0
19 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 25.0
20 CH2M HILL Cos. 20.9
21 Industrial Contractors Inc. 17.5
22 Aker Kvaerner 15.4
23 Day & Zimmermann Group 15.0
24 Okland Construction 12.7
25 McGough Cos. 11.3
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in Pharmaceuticals
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 BE&K Inc. 251.3
2 Jacobs 80.9
3 Fru-Con Construction 53.0
4 AMEC Americas 50.0
5 Turner Industries Group LLC. 28.6
6 Miron Construction Co. Inc. 28.5
7 Cianbro Corp. 27.9
8 The Yates Cos. Inc. 26.5
9 Layne Christensen Co. 26.2
10 The Boldt Co. 24.6*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 10 in Pulp and Paper Mills
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probably continue to do so. “In general, the work seems to becoming from every direction right now,” says Schroeder. “Usu-ally, we see some markets up and some down. Even thoughwe’ve got some flat ones right now, most seem to be steadilyheading up. It’s a really good picture for engineers, contractorsand owners alike.” �
Manufacturing/Industrial Process
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Jacobs 245.0
2 Fluor Corp. 185.7
3 BE&K Inc. 156.0
4 Foster Wheeler Ltd. 137.0
5 S&B Holdings Ltd. and Affiliates 89.3
6 Bechtel 88.0
7 Industrial Contractors Inc. 73.2
8 Parsons 60.8
9 CH2M HILL Cos. 42.7
10 Global Performance 31.2
11 Washington Group International 27.4
12 Harper Industries Inc. 21.0
13 TIC Holdings Inc. 20.3
14 Day & Zimmermann Group 20.0
15 CCC Group Inc. 14.9
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 15 in Chemical Plants
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 The Stellar Group 250.3
2 The Haskell Co. 135.1
3 Klinger Cos. Inc. 97.0
4 BE&K Inc. 69.4
5 Fluor Corp. 67.8
6 The Turner Corp. 58.0
7 TIC Holdings Inc. 56.5
8 Big-D Corp. 56.0
9 Washington Group International 43.0
10 The Facility Group 35.0
11 Alberici Corp. 29.9
12 Jacobs 28.8
13 McCarthy Building Cos. Inc. 28.0
14 Choate Construction Co. 28.0
15 Fru-Con Construction 25.7
16 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 19.0
17 Panattoni Construction Inc. 16.4
18 H+M Co. Inc. 16.0
19 AZCO Inc. 13.1
20 CH2M HILL Cos. 12.7
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 20 in Food Processing
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Petroleum
Big Finds, High Prices and DemandLubricate the Construction MarketBut contractors are hustling to keep pace with qualified people
refinery near Gary, Ind. It will boost the 405,000-bbl-day refin-ery’s capacity to process Canadian crude from 20% to 90%.
CB&I is doing $65 million of engineering, fabrication andonsite assembly of process vessels for an upgrader being devel-oped by Suncor Energy Services in Fort McMurray, Alberta,scheduled for completion in late 2008.
Exploration in the Gulf of Mexico continues to yield newwells. As of July, seven new deepwater discoveries of oil and gashave been made in 2006, ranging in depth from 3,300 ft to 7,600ft, according to the Minerals Management Service of the U.S.Dept. of the Interior.
To handle an increased supply of crude and natural gas fromthe Gulf of Mexico, several companies are upgrading technol-ogy and expanding their processing capacity at existing termi-nals. CB&I is in the middle of an $85-million crude and vacu-um unit expansion at the Frontier Oil refinery in El Dorado,Kan., scheduled for completion in early 2008. It also is workingon the $225-million design, fabrication and installation of ahydro-cracker and sulfur-removal/tail-gas treating units for anundisclosed U.S. refinery, scheduled for completion next year.And Fluor will by the end of the year complete front-end engi-neering and design work for a $2.2-billion expansion of aGaryville, La., refinery for Marathon Petroleum Co.
In Port Arthur, Texas, Motivia Enterprises LLC plans tohave the largest refinery in the U.S. after a 325,000-bbl-a-dayexpansion. A joint venture of Bechtel/Jacobs Engineering is theengineering, procurement and construction contractor. Work isexpected to begin in 2007 and be completed in 2010. Motivia isjointly owned by Saudi Refining Inc. and Shell Oil Co.
More GasAccording to U.S. Dept. of Energy, most conventional naturalgas reserves in the U.S. are already found, but owners of ener-gy projects see great promise in imports of liquefied natural gasfrom abroad. CB&I has been awarded a $1-billion engineer-procure-construct contract for the Golden Pass LNG ImportTerminal in Sabine Pass, Texas, with a capacity of processing15.6 million tons per year of LNG when the terminal starts upin 2009. The work includes two ship berths, five 155,000-cu-mcontainer storage tanks and a regasification and sendout system.
Matrix Service Co., Tulsa, in collaboration with DiamondLNG, is working on the $126-million design and constructionof three 160,000-cu-m LNG tanks for Cheniere Energy inCameron Parish, La. Completion is expected in 2008.
The rising price of oil and a growing global economyhave contractors in the petroleum market collecting thespoils but also feeling the pinch as resources arestretched thin.
War in the Middle East combined with steadily rising glob-al demand pushed oil prices well above the $75-per-barrel markthis summer. Oil companies, already posting record profits, lastyear announced billions of dollars of expansion projects acrossNorth America, and contractors are faced with a growingdemand for their services as they chase too few resources inmaterials and labor.
Construction of major new oil complexes is under way in theMiddle East, Asia and Africa. The U.S., however, is “not ascompetitive in petrochemicals as it used to be,” says Ray Bignell,the London-based director of strategic planning for FosterWheeler, Clinton, N.J. The last new U.S. refinery was builtover 30 years ago, but a 150,000-bbl-a-day refinery is proposednear Yuma, Ariz., The $3-billion greenfield project is beingdeveloped by Arizona Clean Fuels Yuma LLC.
“I think for the foreseeable future you will see clients expandhere domestically, because it will be very difficult to permit anygrass-roots refineries,” says Chip Ray, senior vice president ofcorporate planning at CB&I, The Woodlands, Texas.
Demand for services in North American markets is beingdriven by three factors—another phase of the Canadian OilSands projects, reinvestment in the Gulf of Mexico and theincreased supply of heavier crudes from around the world, saysJeff Faulk, president of Energy and Chemicals at Fluor, Dallas.The bulk of new projects are modifications, expansions andupgrades of existing facilities.
The flow of Canadian crude is spurring several major proj-ects in North America. According to the Edmonton CFA soci-ety, which hosted a conference this summer on opportunities inAlberta’s Oil Sands, the region holds over 170 billion barrels ofoil and will provide 2 million barrels per day by 2010.
This summer, Fluor started front-end engineering anddesign work on a $2-billion expansion of a heavy oil upgraderfor Husky Energy Inc. in Lloydminster, Saskatchewan, Cana-da. The facility, which processes heavy oil into low-sulfur syn-thetic crude oil to be used in refineries in Canada and the U.S.,will increase capacity from 80,000 to 150,000 barrels per day inorder to meet expected growth in supply from the Lloydmin-ster area and from the Oil Sands in Cold Lake, Alberta. Fluoralso is the contractor on a $3-billion retrofit of BP’s Whiting
By Alex Padalka
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tipurpose supply vessels. They will be the largest offshore-sup-ply vessels in the world when completed in 2007. The rig indus-try until recently has operated at 70% capacity but today “farexceeds 100%,” says Vigue. “The demand is so significantthere’s a backlog of new orders...it’s a huge opportunity.”
A proposed $20-billion, 3,600-mile gas pipeline from Alas-ka’s North Slope along the Alcan Highway through the Yukonand British Columbia would require “a tremendous amount offloating equipment,” as will other pipeline projects awaitingfinal approval, says Don McElroy, senior vice president ofMarine Transportation and Petroleum division at Foss Mar-itime Cos., a Seattle-based services and project managementfirm. The other jobs include a 720-mile gas pipeline from the
Other projects recently authorized by the Federal EnergyRegulatory Commission include construction of a 116.8-miledual 42-in.-diameter Creole Trail Pipeline by Cheniere throughCameron to Acadia parishes in Louisiana to connect with mar-kets in the rest of the U.S.; and a Port Arthur, Texas, terminalby Sempra that will include six storage tanks with individualcapacity of 160,000 cu m and a 70-mile, 36-in.-diameterpipeline to the Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Co. in Beaure-gard Parish, La. On the East Coast, BP America ProductionCo. is building an onshore terminal in Logan Township, N.J.,that will include 450,000 cu m of storage and a connection withan 11-mile Texas Eastern Transmission Co. pipeline to extendthrough Delaware County, Pa. And Dominion will nearly dou-ble the capacity of its Cove Point LNG facility near Lusby, Md.,with two 160,000-cu-m storage tanks and related facilities tosend more natural gas to Mid-Atlantic and Northeast markets.
EthanologyInterest in ethanol storage and blending facilities is catchingfire. U.S. ethanol production has grown from 2.8 billion gallonsin 2003 to over 4 billion gallons at the end of 2005. There cur-rently are 101 ethanol production plants, with 46 more underconstruction and dozens in planning stages, according to theAmerican Coalition on Ethanol.
PCL Constructors, Alberta, is building a $120-millionethanol plant for Husky Energy in Canada and looking at sev-eral ethanol projects in the U.S., according to Peter Stalenhoef,president and CEO. Considering the size of the contract rela-tive to the company’s overall portfolio of projects, Stalenhoefsays he can see PCL doing 20% or more of its work in bio-renewable fuels as earlier as next year.
Matrix is working on ethanol storage, blending and loadingfacilities in the West and Hawaii. It recently finished a $24.8-million conversion of four terminals for Chevron in Hawaii.
Cianbro Corp., a Pittsfield, Maine-based contractor, isworking on prototype ethanol and other bio-renewable facili-ties in Maine over the next two years, according to Peter Vigue,president and CEO. “There is a strong desire in the energyindustry, along with the EPC industry, to find alternatives [tofossil fuels] that are cost-effective and beneficial from an envi-ronmental perspective,” says John Redmon, executive vice pres-ident of operations at CB&I.
Maritime MarketContractors also are seeing plenty of marine work, in part dueto Katrina recovery work under way in the Gulf states and thegrowing petroleum market in general. “The day rates for [Gulfof Mexico] rigs are in some cases twice what they used to be.There is huge demand and not enough capacity, and that isputting a demand on companies like ours,” says Vigue. It hasjust completed construction of two fifth-generation semi-sub-mersible 12,500-ton rigs and started work this summer on a$110-million conversion of two sulfur tankers into 370-ft, mul-
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Fluor Corp. 4,035.1
2 Bechtel 2,620.0
3 CB&I 1,861.0
4 KBR 1,267.8
5 Jacobs 1,111.6
6 Turner Industries Group LLC 803.6
7 Foster Wheeler Ltd. 588.0
8 ABB Lummus Global 459.1
9 The Shaw Group Inc. 429.8
10 Kiewit Corp. 413.9
11 Zachry Construction Corp. 399.5
12 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 386.0
13 Matrix Service Co. 339.4
14 TIC Holdings Inc. 301.5
15 Austin Industries 226.6
16 Performance Contractors Inc. 217.0
17 Primoris Corp. 204.6
18 Burns & McDonnell 187.1
19 Michels Corp. 151.9
20 VECO Corp. 151.3
21 AMEC Americas 144.0
22 The Cust-O-Fab Cos. LLC 136.0
23 Elkhorn Holdings 106.7
24 Washington Group International 87.2
25 Aker Kvaerner 84.1
*BASED ON 2005 CONTRACTING REVENUE FROM PETROLEUM AS REPORTED IN ENR’S SURVEY OF LEADING CONTRACTORS AND DESIGN FIRMS.
The Top 25 in Petroleum
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Turner Industries Group LLC. 604.0
2 Zachry Construction Corp. 349.3
3 Jacobs 296.1
4 Fluor Corp. 208.8
5 Matrix Service Co. 200.6
6 KBR 186.8
7 TIC Holdings Inc. 179.4
8 Austin Industries 165.3
9 The Cust-O-Fab Cos. LLC 136.0
10 Foster Wheeler Ltd. 82.0
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 10 in Maintenance
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64 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � October 2006 enr.com
Mackenzie Delta on the Beaufort Sea to northern Alberta.Across the board, contractors say rising demand for services
is straining materials and labor resources. “The biggest chal-lenge all of us face is finding qualified resources,” says CB&I’sRay. Firms are seeking various solutions, from recruiting drivesand in-house training programs to staffing from abroad andoutsourcing engineering services to Europe, India and Japan,says PCL’s Stalenhoef. On Gulf projects, CB&I regularly hireslaborers from the Philippines, says Ray. But not all firms lookabroad for help. Some, like Fluor, meet increased loads by dis-persing projects across three to four global offices. “We’d ratherexport work than import people,” says Faulk.
The future will be just as challenging. “The challenges willcontinue to be matching capacity to customer schedules and therecruitment, training and retention of professional skilled craftpersons,” according to John Newmeister, vice president of mar-keting and development at Matrix. “The solution is to treat yourhuman resources as your greatest assets for their and the com-pany’s future success.” �
Petroleum
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 KBR 328.9
2 Kiewit Corp. 305.1
3 ABB Lummus Global 144.4
4 Aker Kvaerner 58.7
5 Fluor Corp. 56.2
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 5 in OffshoreAnd Underwater Facilities
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bechtel 246.0
2 AMEC Americas 144.4
3 Primoris Corp. 117.4
4 Fluor Corp. 110.8
5 Sheehan Pipe Line Construction Co. 66.0
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 5 in Pipelines
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Fluor Corp. 3,659.3
2 Bechtel 2,374.0
3 Jacobs 815.5
4 KBR 752.0
5 Foster Wheeler Ltd. 506.0
6 The Shaw Group Inc. 426.9
7 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 344.0
8 ABB Lummus Global 314.7
9 Performance Contractors Inc. 217.0
10 Turner Industries Group LLC. 199.6
11 Burns & McDonnell 187.1
12 VECO Corp. 176.3
13 TIC Holdings Inc. 142.1
14 Kiewit Corp. 107.5
15 Matrix Service Co. 96.9
16 Elkhorn Holdings 90.0
17 Primoris Corp. 87.3
18 Black & Veatch 64.0
19 Austin Industries 61.3
20 Cajun Constructors Inc. 54.0
21 Zachry Construction Corp. 50.2
22 Washington Group International 45.2
23 BMW Constructors Inc. 42.1
24 S&B Holdings Ltd. and Affiliates 38.5
25 BE&K Inc. 30.8
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in RefineriesAnd Petrochemical Plants
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Rules (CAMR), also put into effect this year, will reduce emis-sions 69% by 2018. The regulations have led to a scramble toconform coal plants to tougher requirements for nitrogen oxide,mercury and sulfur dioxide emissions, says Jim Lamon, presi-dent of the power division of The Shaw Group, Baton Rouge.Consequently, there’s a proliferation of flue gas desulfurization,or scrubber, retrofits. “We do have several customers that havecome to us this year given the compliance dates that they arefaced with,” Lamon says. Both CAIR and CAMR will phase intheir emission requirements. The first hurdle for utilities is in2009, when the first cap for nitrogen oxide emissions goes intoeffect. CAIR requires electric generating units conform to emis-sion requirements by 2015. The final phase of CAMR requiresutilities to cap mercury emissions to 15 tons beginning in 2018.
The Shaw Group is installing scrubbers at two of DukeEnergy’s coal-fired plants in North Carolina. Southern Compa-ny last year launched a 10-year, $6.2-billion program to installscrubbers on nine of its aging plants, and selective catalyticreduction control systems and baghouses at other plants to bedetermined at a later date.
The Bush administration’s Advanced Energy Initiative,announced in January, offers incentives to utilities that buildpowerplants with clean-air technologies and provides a 22%funding increase for clean-energy technology research at theU.S. Dept. of Energy.
A number of companies are working with utilities to devel-op integrated gasification combined-cycle (IGCC) powerplants,which gasify coal, allowing extraction of pollutants and genera-tion of electricity by expanding the gas across turbines. Bechtel,for instance, is working with General Electric to develop a pro-totype IGCC plant for mass customization by the end of theyear.
Dave Dunning, senior vice president of Fluor’s power divi-sion, adds that the first full-scale-capacity IGCC plants are notthat far off. “There are a lot of studies going on right now,” hesays. DOE is scouting sites for the world’s first integratedsequestration and hydrogen production research powerplant, aprototype research project to determine the feasibility of pro-ducing electricity and hydrogen from coal, while sequesteringcarbon dioxide produced in the process.
With gasification technology not widely available, manyfirms use the best available technologies to build coal plants thatburn cleaner than pulverized-coal plants. “They want it builtsoon, and they want proven technology,” Lamon says.
Regulations Ramp Up Retrofit Market As Interest in Clean Coal RenewsSoaring fuel costs, new emissions rules shape sector outlook
The recent volatility of natural gas and oil prices, coupledwith new administration policies emphasizing a shift toenvironmentally friendly power sources, has ownersmoving back toward more traditional sources of
energy, most notably “clean” coal and coal retrofit projects. As gas and oil prices have continued to climb, utilities around
the nation are shifting from commissioning gas-fired plants,which dominated the market between 2000 and 2003, to coalplants and plants that harness clean coal technologies. Thetrend shows no sign of abating over the next several years, in-dustry observers say. Bechtel, a leader in the power constructionmarket, estimates that some 17 new coal plants are under con-struction across the country, and several more are in the works.
“Currently, coal is definitely the fuel of choice,” says GeorgeNash, senior vice president of business development for Boise-based Washington Group International’s Power Business Unit.WGI has two coal plant projects under way and six in the con-ceptual engineering and design phase, Nash says.
In April, TXU Corp., a Dallas-based energy company,announced a $10-billion plan to build 11 new coal-fired unitsat nine existing TXU power sites. The plants, totaling 8,600MW, will be fueled by pulverized coal. Bechtel will design andbuild eight of the plants using a standard “reference plan” andwill also build a plant at TXU’s Sandow station. TXU hasawarded the engineering, procurement and construction of twoplants at its Oak Grove station to Fluor Corp., Irving, Texas.TXU Corp. expects all of the plants to be fully operational by2010. Bechtel recently completed work on a 400-MW pulver-ized-coal plant in Spingerville, Ariz. for the Tri-State Genera-tion and Transmission Association Inc.
Another major project is Unit 2 of the J.K. Spruce power-plant in San Antonio, Texas. CPS Energy awarded constructioncontracts for the 750-MW coal-fired plant to TIC HoldingsInc., Steamboat Springs, Colo., and Zachry ConstructionCorp., San Antonio. CPS Energy expects to have the new unitoperational by 2010. “There has been a significant trend incoal-fired projects—not just announcements, but projects thathave and will soon kick off,” says Paul Compton, TIC vicepresident of corporate marketing.
Newly enacted changes to the Clean Air Act in the form ofthe Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) will reduce powerplantnitrogen oxide emissions by 53% and sulfur dioxide emissionlevels by 45% from 2003 baseline levels by 2009, with furtherreduction targets for 2010 and 2015. The Clean Air Mercury
PowerBy Pam Hunter
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AlternativesThe president’s energy initiative also rekindled interest in long-dormant nuclear technologies, the first activity the market hasexperienced since the 1970s. “There’s quite a bit of activity bothin the United States and internationally to expand nuclear gen-
Power
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bechtel 2,944.0
2 The Shaw Group Inc. 1,110.9
3 Fluor Corp. 904.2
4 Washington Group International 693.2
5 Foster Wheeler Ltd. 513.0
6 Black & Veatch 475.4
7 Day & Zimmermann Group 430.0
8 The Atlantic Group 335.0
9 TIC Holdings Inc. 286.6
10 Zachry Construction Corp. 261.2
11 Aker Kvaerner 249.1
12 Kiewit Corp. 237.3
13 M.A. Mortenson Co. 173.7
14 Perini Corp. 155.0
15 Skanska USA Inc. 135.6
16 Kenny Construction 130.0
17 Industrial Contractors Inc. 113.7
18 Joseph Jingoli & Son Inc. 110.0
19 Primoris Corp. 90.6
20 AZCO Inc. 89.0
21 Barton Malow Co. 88.0
22 Alberici Corp. 85.0
23 The Stellar Group 77.4
24 Burns & McDonnell 72.8
25 Michels Corp. 71.7
26 Cianbro Corp. 70.8
27 The Boldt Co. 70.0
28 Matrix Service Co. 63.5
29 Danella Cos. Inc. 61.9
30 J.J. White Inc. 60.0
31 S&B Holdings Ltd. and Affiliates 58.5
32 O’Connor Constructors 56.4
33 Turner Industries Group LLC 52.2
34 Bowen Engineering Corp. 50.0
35 Cives Steel Co. 47.5
36 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 46.0
37 WorleyParsons Corp. 41.8
38 Jacobs 41.3
39 H+M Co. Inc. 40.0
40 CB&I 39.0
41 O&G Industries Inc. 33.8
42 Miron Construction Co. Inc. 32.7
43 Odebrecht Construction Inc. 29.3
44 The Yates Cos. Inc. 28.9
45 Stevens Painton Corp. 27.1
46 AMEC Americas 27.0
47 Mascaro Construction Co. LP 24.9
48 Knutson Construction Services 20.0
49 Graycor 18.0
50 Crowder Construction Co. 17.2
*BASED ON 2005 CONTRACTING REVENUE FROM POWER AS REPORTED IN ENR’S SURVEY OF LEADING CONTRACTORS AND DESIGN FIRMS.
The Top 50 in Power
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bechtel 752.0
2 The Shaw Group Inc. 602.9
3 Fluor Corp. 296.4
4 TIC Holdings Inc. 283.0
5 Black & Veatch 275.1
6 Washington Group International 270.5
7 Aker Kvaerner 244.4
8 Zachry Construction Corp. 209.4
9 Foster Wheeler Ltd. 188.0
10 Kiewit Corp. 145.6
11 Skanska USA Inc. 117.7
12 Primoris Corp. 90.6
13 AZCO Inc. 86.3
14 Perini Corp. 86.0
15 The Boldt Co. 70.0
16 Alberici Corp. 64.9
17 S&B Holdings Ltd. and Affiliates 58.5
18 Bowen Engineering Corp. 50.0
19 Industrial Contractors Inc. 45.5
20 Burns & McDonnell 41.1
21 H+M Co. Inc. 40.0
22 Miron Construction Co. Inc. 32.7
23 Turner Industries Group LLC. 32.4
24 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 28.0
25 O’Connor Constructors 26.1
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in Fossil Fuel
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Barton Malow Co. 88.0
2 Foster Wheeler Ltd. 83.0
3 The Stellar Group 77.4
4 Jacobs 41.3
5 Joseph Jingoli & Son Inc. 40.0
6 The Yates Cos. Inc. 21.2
7 BE&K Inc. 15.5
8 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 14.0
9 Turner Industries Group LLC. 8.4
10 Kiewit Corp. 7.8
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 10 in Cogeneration
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Fluor Corp. 606.8
2 Day & Zimmermann Group 430.0
3 The Atlantic Group 335.0
4 Washington Group International 95.0
5 Perini Corp. 69.0
6 Cianbro Corp. 68.5
7 Industrial Contractors Inc. 68.2
8 Zachry Construction Corp. 50.2
9 WorleyParsons Corp. 41.8
10 O’Connor Constructors 30.3
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 10 in Operations & Maintenance
Port Washington powerplant site in Wisconsin. The owner onthe project is We Energies, a division of Wisconsin Energy.
Market leaders say they have projects for gas-fired plantseither under way or in the pipeline, but they note that thevolatility of gas and oil prices have diverted owners’ interesttoward coal. As the outlook for gas dims, coal-fired power-plants will continue to dominate the power market, says Lem-bo. “I know utilities would like to build more gas-fired plants,but due to the volatility of the price of gas, they’re reluctant todo that,” he says. �
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eration as an option,” says Nash. Dunning says utilities willbegin to seek permitting for new nuclear facilities, which couldbegin midway through the next decade. “It’s not going to be themost accelerated program we’ve ever seen,” Dunning says.
Wind as a power source is another area of growth. TheEnergy Policy Act provided $3.4 billion in tax incentives toencourage wind projects. This year, the American Wind Ener-gy Association, DOE and the National Renewable Energy Lab-oratory agreed to develop a plan to provide up to 20% of thenation’s electricity from wind energy, which currently providesless than 1%. Wind energy “reduces U.S. dependence onimported energy,” says Randall Swisher, executive director ofthe American Wind Energy Association. TIC recently complet-ed the San Juan Mesa wind project located near Elida, N.M.,for Padoma Wind Power LLC. The project included the designand erection of 120 1-MW Mitsubishi wind turbines. TIC andHailey, Idaho-based Power Engineers completed the designand construction.
But many say alternative energy’s role in the overall powerindustry will remain minor for now. “Will they completelychange the landscape in the near future? I don’t think so,” Dun-ning says. “Wind is localized, you’ll find it in Europe, the upperNorthwest, Texas and then offshore. You’re not going to see alot of it in the Northeast or the Midwest or in the cities.”
Although utilities have shifted focus to coal, new gas-firedplants are still being built. “Gas-fired plants are simple to con-struct and can go into service a lot faster than coal-fired or oil-fired plants,” says Mike Lembo, president the power group forSlattery Skanska, Parsippany, N.J. This year, Slattery complet-ed work on a 500-MW combined-cycle gas and steam turbinepowerplant for the New York Power Authority in New YorkCity’s borough of Queens. Washington Group Internationalis building two 545-MW natural-gas-powered units on the
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bechtel 1,649.0
2 The Shaw Group Inc. 451.4
3 Washington Group International 124.7
4 Joseph Jingoli & Son Inc. 48.0
5 Black & Veatch 23.5
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 5 in Nuclear Plants
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bechtel 543.0
2 Washington Group International 203.0
3 Black & Veatch 152.0
4 The Shaw Group Inc. 104.5
5 Danella Companies, Inc. 61.9
6 Kiewit Corp. 60.5
7 Burns & McDonnell 31.7
8 Odebrecht Construction Inc. 29.3
9 O&G Industries Inc. 19.1
10 Barr & Barr Inc. 14.5
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 10 in TransmissionAnd Distribution
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In addition to emissions reduction projects, carbon dioxideis lurking as a wild card that could spur more business if feder-al regulation comes to pass, and many speculate that it will.David Crane, president and CEO at NRG Energy, Princeton,N.J., expects federal regulations for carbon dioxide to come inthe next few years. This year, seven Northeast states jointly ini-tiated the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a cap-and-tradeprogram to reduce carbon dioxide emissions 10% by 2020. Cal-ifornia passed similar emissions regulations this year.
In the absence of feasible retrofit technology for CO2 emis-sion cuts from coal-fired plants, NRG has plans to add integrat-ed gasification combined-cycle plants as well as wind andnuclear power facilities to its portfolio to cut its overall emis-sion levels. Emissions regulations could spark a shift to newtechnologies instead of retrofitting work, many say. “The ques-tion could be instead of making this large investment in retro-fits, should we move toward technologies that don’t produce asmuch emissions?” says Nash.
While opportunities for work are plentiful, materials costsand a dearth of labor are potential setbacks for the environmen-tal sector’s future. High costs of steel, petroleum, cement andcopper may slow some projects, and contractors say that thewaning labor resource pool is a downside of the boom. “It is dif-ficult to attract and hire new skilled people,” says Bob Rose,president of Atlantic Skanska, Atlanta. “There’s a premium onpeople who are performers. The companies that want to groware competing for the same people. It is as difficult to find a sea-soned project engineer as it is to find a true carpenter.”
Lembo says that the labor shortage is “the single-biggestproblem facing most large construction firms.” To keep projectsstaffed, Skanska has “very sophisticated training programs totake young engineers and train them over several years,” Lem-bo says. “We have an extensive intern program to attract grad-uates, but there’s still a shortage.”
Volatile material prices and labor shortages have bondingcompanies raising rates. “Most of the bond issues have beenwith subcontractors,” says Rose. “There have been more re-strictions for some...contractors that aren’t quite as strong.”
A growing trend in the water and wastewater market is useof membrane technology. “In the U.S. there is heavy use ofmembranes,” says Peter Tunnicliffe, senior vice president ofengineer-contractor CDM, Cambridge, Mass. Growing use ofthinner, more efficient membranes, which filter out pollutantsfrom water and wastewater, has lead to new players and better
Clean-Air Regulations Spur MarketFor Spate of Emissions RetrofitsNew federal standards expected to pump billions into sector
The environmental contracting market continues to seerobust growth, particularly in the water, wastewater andclean-air markets, despite a shrinking labor pool that hascontractors scrambling.
The water and wastewater market is full of activity withdozens of large-scale projects under way around the country.One of the biggest water projects is the South Florida WaterManagement District’s Everglades restoration project.SFWMD has started awarding contracts under its Acceler8 pro-gram, including a massive $400-million reservoir project in theEverglades Agricultural Area. It was awarded to Barnard-Par-sons, a joint venture of Barnard Construction Co. Inc., Boze-man, Mont., and Parsons, Pasadena, Calif. The Acceler8 initia-tive will fast-track eight key restoration projects.
New federal regulations have spurred many clean-air pro-jects and are expected to keep the market booming for severalmore years, contractors say. In March last year, the U.S. Envi-ronmental Protection Agency issued the Clean Air InterstateRule (CAIR), designed to achieve the largest reduction in airpollution in more than a decade. “The big market for air as aresult of the Clean Air Act is retrofitting wet scrubbers on coal-fired powerplants,” says Michael Lembo, senior vice presidentof Skanska USA Civil, Whitestone, N.Y. Mandating restrictionsin emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx) and sulfur dioxide (SO2),the new regulation is expected to drive $20 billion to $30 bil-lion in business over the next 10 years, says George Nash, seniorvice president at Washington Group International, Boise.
The rule will reduce allowable NOx and SO2 emissions in2009, 2010 and 2015. NOx will be cut 53% from 2003 levels by2009 and another 61% by 2015. SO2 will be reduced by 45%from 2003 levels by 2010 and another 57% by 2015. Mercuryemissions will also be regulated under the Clean Air MercuryRules, although not until 2018, at which point total emissionsmust be reduced 69% from a 1999 baseline.
In response, scrubber retrofits will be added to pulverized-coal-fired powerplants, and contractors already are clamoringfor a piece of the action. “From an engineering and construc-tion standpoint, these projects take about three years. There areprobably more than 50 major capital projects that range from$75 million to over $400 million,” says Nash. Although thereare two phases to the cuts, Nash expects that most of the expen-ditures will come in the immediate future. “There will be own-ers who will do their projects all at once in preparation for2015,” he says.
EnvironmentalBy E. Michael Powers
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74 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � October 2006 enr.com
technologies, he says. “General Electric and Siemens havemoved heavily into the membrane market, ” he says.
Membranes are key in desalination of seawater and brackishwater, says Tunnicliffe. “The potable water supply issues in parts
of California, Texas and Florida are a trend driving desalters anddesalination projects,” he says. In wastewater treatment the useof membranes is growing, says Tunnicliffe. “The trend is thatas membranes improve the number of projects has increased.”One notable project CDM designed and constructed is the $16-million, 4.3-million-gallon-per-day West Basin Water Recy-cling Facility, completed last year in El Segundo, Calif. Theplant treats secondary effluent through microfiltration and anion exchange reverse-osmosis system.
In hazardous waste, the Katrina cleanup is driving work forsome firms. “The federal markets are strong,” says Bill Webb,
Environmental
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Kiewit Corp. 288.5
2 The Walsh Group Ltd. 287.1
3 Layne Christensen Co. 281.2
4 Garney Holding Co. 224.6
5 TIC Holdings Inc. 175.1
6 CB&I 142.0
7 Washington Group International 141.0
8 Morganti Group Inc. 136.7
9 Earth Tech Inc. 134.0
10 Barnard Construction Co. Inc. 131.4
11 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 116.0
12 Parsons 108.4
13 McCarthy Building Cos. Inc. 105.0
14 CH2M HILL Cos. 104.7
15 Oscar Renda Contracting Inc. 101.4
16 AMEC Americas 99.0
17 Black & Veatch 91.1
18 CDM 90.1
19 Clyde Cos. 88.5
20 Pizzagalli Construction 88.0
21 Cajun Constructors Inc. 71.0
22 Skanska USA Inc. 69.9
23 J. Fletcher Creamer & Son Inc. 68.1
24 American Infrastructure Inc. 67.6
25 MWH 60.9
*BASED ON 2005 CONTRACTING REVENUE FROM WATER SUPPLY AS REPORTED IN ENR’S SURVEY OF LEADING CONTRACTORS AND DESIGN FIRMS.
The Top 25 in Water Supply
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 The Walsh Group Ltd. 270.1
2 Earth Tech Inc. 131.0
3 McCarthy Building Cos. Inc. 105.0
4 AMEC Americas 95.0
5 Black & Veatch 91.1
6 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 90.0
7 TIC Holdings Inc. 88.1
8 Pizzagalli Construction 88.0
9 CH2M HILL Cos. 78.2
10 Cajun Constructors Inc. 71.0
11 Garney Holding Co. 66.3
12 CDM 61.6
13 Clyde Cos. 60.0
14 Kiewit Corp. 56.4
15 Wharton-Smith Inc. 54.4
16 MWH 53.0
17 Layne Christensen Co. 44.3
18 Primoris Corp. 43.7
19 The Haskell Co. 43.0
20 J.R. Filanc Construction Co. Inc. 41.7
21 Shook National Corp. 39.5
22 Parsons 39.4
23 M. B. Kahn Construction Co. Inc. 31.7
24 Bowen Engineering Corp. 30.0
25 Adolfson & Peterson Construction 25.0
25 Hunter Contracting Co. 25.0
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
**TWO FIRMS WERE TIED IN REVENUE.
The Top 25 in Water Treatment And Desalination**
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Garney Holding Co. 158.3
2 Kiewit Corp. 118.5
3 Washington Group International 85.0
4 TIC Holdings Inc. 62.3
5 Barnard Construction Co. Inc. 53.7
6 Layne Christensen Co. 42.9
7 Lyles Construction Group 37.2
8 Frontier-Kemper Constructors Inc. 36.8
9 American Infrastructure Inc. 36.8
10 Clyde Cos. 28.5
11 Danella Companies, Inc. 27.9
12 Skanska USA Inc. 23.8
13 CDM 22.5
14 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 21.0
15 Sundt Construction Inc. 18.5
16 RMCI Inc. 16.7
17 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 16.0
18 Azteca Enterprises Group 15.0
19 AUI Inc. 14.9
20 The Conti Group 12.7
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 20 in TransmissionLines and Aqueducts
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Kiewit Corp. 113.6
2 Barnard Construction Co. Inc. 77.7
3 Parsons 68.0
4 Washington Group International 56.0
5 Granite Construction Inc. 46.0
6 Traylor Bros. Inc. 40.0
7 SEMA Construction Inc. 36.4
8 Alberici Corp. 34.4
9 Skanska USA Inc. 32.7
10 The Shaw Group Inc. 20.2
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 10 in Dams and Reservoirs
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gency Management Agency,” says Webb. In other markets,asbestos remediation is particularly active. “Each year ourasbestos revenue is growing,” says Burton Fried, president ofNew York City-based LVI Services Inc.
Expand and ContractIn the water and wastewater market, owners are rethinking howthey approach contracts, says Tunnicliffe. “We have seen adecline in the number of design-build-operate procurements.There are some balance-of-risk issues,” he says. Design-build-operate procurements are down at least 70%, he says.
“There has been enough of a period for it to set in that manyof the promises made by the marketing departments are notrealistic,” he claims. The new method typically entails hiring a
executive vice president at Long Beach, Calif.-based Earth TechInc. Contracted with EPA, “we are involved in collection anddisposal of hazardous waste in New Orleans, and we are assess-ing damage at state and local facilities for the Federal Emer-
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Insituform Technologies Inc. 544.0
2 McCarthy Building Cos. Inc. 86.0
3 American Infrastructure Inc. 73.9
4 Earth Tech Inc. 73.0
5 Layne Christensen Co. 72.3
6 Gilbane Building Co. 59.5
7 Frontier-Kemper Constructors Inc. 40.0
8 Primoris Corp. 33.0
9 Traylor Bros. Inc. 32.0
10 Sundt Construction Inc. 29.0
11 Barnard Construction Co. Inc. 26.5
12 Skanska USA Inc. 25.1
13 Garney Holding Co. 23.6
14 AMEC Americas 21.0
15 Danella Companies Inc. 20.1
16 Kokosing Construction Co. Inc. 19.6
17 Sukut Construction Inc. 19.0
18 MEB General Contractors 19.0
19 Kiewit Corp. 17.1
20 Azteca Enterprises Group 12.0
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 20 in SanitaryAnd Storm Sewers
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Earth Tech Inc. 181.0
2 Skanska USA Inc. 145.0
3 TIC Holdings Inc. 130.5
4 The Walsh Group Ltd. 127.0
5 Brasfield & Gorrie LLC 118.8
6 Walbridge Aldinger 112.0
7 Pizzagalli Construction 104.0
8 Fru-Con Construction 79.4
9 Alberici Corp. 78.9
10 Black & Veatch 76.8
11 Parsons 76.6
12 MWH 76.5
13 Wharton-Smith Inc. 76.4
14 C. Overaa & Co. 75.2
15 Ulliman Schutte Construction LLC 68.8
16 Barton Malow Co. 66.0
17 J.R. Filanc Construction Co. Inc. 59.3
18 Crowder Construction Co. 58.8
19 Max Foote Construction Co. Inc. 58.3
20 B.L. Harbert International 51.0
21 Kokosing Construction Co. Inc. 46.0
22 Layne Christensen Co. 44.4
23 Encore Construction Co. 41.8
24 CH2M HILL Cos. 41.3
25 PCL Construction Enterprises Inc. 41.0
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 25 in Wastewater TreatmentRANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Insituform Technologies 544.0
2 Earth Tech Inc. 281.0
3 Skanska USA Inc. 177.2
4 TIC Holdings Inc. 138.4
5 The Walsh Group Ltd. 127.0
6 Brasfield & Gorrie LLC 118.8
7 Layne Christensen Co. 116.8
8 Walbridge Aldinger 112.0
9 Pizzagalli Construction 104.0
10 Fru-Con Construction Corp. 88.6
11 McCarthy Building Cos. Inc. 86.0
12 Parsons 84.8
13 Knutson Construction Services 80.0
14 Alberici Corp. 78.9
15 Black & Veatch 76.8
16 MWH 76.5
17 Wharton-Smith Inc. 76.4
18 C. Overaa & Co. 76.4
19 Kiewit Corp. 75.3
20 American Infrastructure Inc. 73.9
21 Sukut Construction Inc. 73.0
22 Ulliman Schutte Construction LLC 68.8
23 Barton Malow Co. 66.0
24 Kokosing Construction Co. Inc. 65.6
25 The Shaw Group Inc. 61.1
*BASED ON 2005 CONTRACTING REVENUE FROM SEWERAGE AND SOLID WASTE AS REPORTED IN ENR’S SURVEY OF LEADING CONTRACTORS AND DESIGN FIRMS.
The Top 25 in Sewerage and Solid Waste
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Sukut Construction Inc. 54.0
2 The Shaw Group Inc. 50.3
3 Weston Solutions Inc. 32.3
4 The Layton Cos. 30.7
5 Earth Tech Inc. 27.0
6 Kiewit Corp. 18.1
7 Flatiron Construction 14.3
8 Danis Building Construction Co. 10.0
9 Fru-Con Construction 8.8
10 SCS Engineers 8.3
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 10 in Solid Waste
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Environmental
design-build firm to design the project for a fixed price, thennegotiating a construction price following design completion,says Tunnicliffe. “It does not force a price to be set too early inthe process,” says Tunnicliffe. Stan Spencer, business develop-ment director at Earth Tech Inc., says, “The new approach isgood. You are able sit down with the client and scope out theproject exactly.” �
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bechtel 3,136.0
2 Washington Group International 1,043.4
3 Fluor Corp. 854.0
4 The Shaw Group Inc. 536.8
5 CH2M HILL Cos. 521.3
6 Jacobs 296.9
7 Sevenson Environmental Services 204.3
8 Parsons 185.7
9 Weston Solutions Inc. 86.0
10 Earth Tech Inc. 84.0
11 Remedial Construction Services LP 72.0
12 Safety & Ecology Holdings Corp. 64.9
13 MWH 36.5
14 The Conti Group 34.8
15 Conestoga-Rovers & Associates 33.0
16 CDM 30.6
17 Foster Wheeler Ltd. 28.0
18 Skanska USA Inc. 21.0
19 Cianbro Corp. 19.8
20 J. Fletcher Creamer & Son Inc. 18.6
21 Turner Industries Group LLC 16.0
22 O’Brien & Gere 14.6
23 Layne Christensen Co. 14.2
24 Dick Construction Co. 14.0
25 Tetra Tech Inc. 10.0
*BASED ON 2005 CONTRACTING REVENUE FROM HAZARDOUS WASTE AS REPORTED IN ENR’S SURVEY OF LEADING CONTRACTORS AND DESIGN FIRMS.
The Top 25 in Hazardous Waste
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bechtel 497.0
2 The Shaw Group Inc. 473.1
3 Washington Group International 402.4
4 Jacobs 200.7
5 Parsons 171.3
6 Weston Solutions Inc. 86.0
7 Earth Tech Inc. 73.0
8 Remedial Construction Services LP 72.0
9 MWH 36.5
10 CH2M HILL Cos. 33.6
11 The Conti Group 33.1
12 Skanska USA Inc. 21.0
13 Cianbro Corp. 19.8
14 CDM 18.0
15 Layne Christensen Co. 14.2
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 15 in ChemicalAnd Soil Remediation
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bechtel 1,907.0
2 Fluor Corp. 854.0
3 Washington Group International 641.0
4 CH2M HILL Cos. 470.4
5 Jacobs 96.2
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 5 in Nuclear Waste
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Another reason for the surge in data centers is the densifica-tion of computer processing power into ever-shrinking foot-prints. As a result, A/Es, owners and contractors seek creativeways to cool equipment. “In the early ’90s there was capacity forabout six to 10 servers per cabinet and today, with the use ofblade servers, there is capacity for 200 in an individual cabinet,”says Deneny. “This creates a need for increased power and heat,which is making a lot of the legacy data centers obsolete,because they can’t deal with today’s power and cooling require-ments.”
The problem has caused companies to evaluate various cool-ing options including installation of water-cooling cabinets,two-story building designs that allow air to circulate throughthe second floor and using large-scale air-handling units. Tomeet cooling requirements, buildings simply need more spacefor cooling systems, says Kevin O’Brien, executive vice presi-dent of mission critical for Structure Tone.
The wireless carrier market also is creating opportunity forcontractors. Fourth-generation, or 4G, services have alreadybeen released in Japan and Europe, causing U.S. wireless carri-ers to prepare for deployment in the near future. In addition,wireless carrier mergers are keeping contractors busy. Mergedcompanies such as Sprint Corp. and Nextel Communications orAT&T Wireless and Cingular Wireless continue upgradinginfrastructure to meet increased demand, shedding redundantsystems and expanding networks to strengthen coverage.“Mergers of networks require carefully planned network con-solidation and decommissioning of sites on a nationwide basis.This endeavor alone is a large project,” says Jake MacLeod,chief technology officer for Bechtel Telecommunications, Fred-erick, Md.
Wireless carriers barely finished building out networks forthird-generation mobile services and already are upgrading to4G. “The planned migration from 2G to 3G to 4G...providessignificant and continuous opportunity for constructors andintegrators,” says MacLeod. “In addition to the traditional tech-nologies, new technologies such as WiMAX and DVB-H are inthe planning stages for rollouts by new competitive carriers.”
Wireless carries have been on a spending frenzy lately. Sprinthas spent $2 billion since 2004 on network improvements anddeployment of its Evolution-Data Optimized (EV-DO) tech-nology, to allow customers to surf the Internet on a phone orother mobile device at broadband speed. Verizon invested about$3 billion on networks in the last two years. “Back in the mid-
Rapidly Evolving Technology SpursNew Round of Capital Investment Demand for data storage centers launches spate of projects
For contractors in the telecommunications sector, work isabundant as companies are again opening their pocket-books to make capital improvements in an evolvingindustry. Investors finally are shrugging off the dot.com
fallout’s bad memories, and telecommunication firms are pump-ing money into projects to match rapidly increasing computingpower and demand for better broadband.
The market in the past was largely driven by upgrades,expansions and mergers in the wireless carrier market. The cur-rent market has data centers shifting to the driver seat as com-panies struggle to increase data storage capacity. “The bigincrease as of this year has been in the area of data centers,” saysDennis Cronin, principal of Gilbane Building Co.’s missioncritical unit in Lawrenceville, N.J. “Large corporations havereleased capital funds and are now actively pursuing the megadata centers.”
Following the stock market tumble in 2000, many compa-nies shelved capital improvement plans and sat on the sidelineswhile investors licked their wounds. But technology innovationscontinued during the economic slump. When the market recov-ered, the nation’s data center inventory was unable to meetcompanies’ new technology and security needs. Two years ago,data center projects were a slow trickle, but now it’s a steadyflow of projects for contractors. “Over the last six to 12 months,there has been a significant increase in the number of data cen-ter projects being built in the U.S. and abroad,” says TerenceDeneny, vice president of Structure Tone Inc.’s mission criticaloffice in New York City. “We’re seeing pretty much all sectorsbuilding data centers from financial services to technology tohealth care.”
Market ShiftSeveral market changes are contributing to the buildout of datacenters. To efficiently manage business operations, financial andtechnology companies are consolidating several older data cen-ters into new 60,000-sq-ft to 70,000-sq-ft data centers. “A lotof companies are outsourcing work, and it’s much easier tocoordinate that activity when you have consolidated datasources,” says Jakob Carnemark, senior vice president of mis-sion critical in Skanska USA Inc.’s New York-New Jersey office.Companies are consolidating smaller centers and increasingredundancy by having one or two synchronous centers in oth-er locations to protect against network outages. Consolidationreduces cost and saves time when deploying future softwareupgrades.
TelecommunicationsBy Lia Steakley
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1990s, I thought we’d build about 10,000 cell sites and be done,but it doesn’t end because the technology is constantly chang-ing,” John McCann, chief executive officer at Conti Commu-nications Inc., Raritan, New Jersey. “It just continues to balloonand grow. As the technology changes, it requires equipment tobe swapped out and additional power.”
Another factor in the market’s surge stems from DSL andcable providers’ efforts to bridge the last mile of fiber-opticcable to customers. The move increased demand for data-richcontent and the need for companies to accommodate capacityassociated with delivering broadband services, adds Carnemark.
Firms seeking compliance with the Health Insurance Porta-bility and Accountability Act, passed by Congress in 1996, spura market for data storage and mobile communications systems.“Insurance and health-care firms are growing out of their cur-rent facilities,” says Cronin. “We also expect to see a sizableincrease in work with all the digital processes and HIPPArequirements that are now coming to market.” �
Telecommunications
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bechtel 1,077.0
2 Holder Construction Co. 421.5
3 Structure Tone Inc. 287.0
4 Gilbane Building Co. 211.6
5 Fluor Corp. 201.3
6 The Turner Corp. 170.3
7 Danella Cos. Inc. 75.7
8 Michels Corp. 67.6
9 Teng Affiliated Cos. 67.0
10 Roebbelen Contracting Inc. 65.0
11 Tetra Tech Inc. 65.0
12 Conti Communications Inc. 61.5
13 Nabholz Construction Corp. 55.4
14 DPR Construction Inc. 55.2
15 The Layton Cos. 45.7
16 Skanska USA Inc. 42.5
17 Sundt Construction Inc. 39.6
18 CH2M HILL Cos. 38.4
19 Key Construction Inc. 37.0
20 Black & Veatch 32.7
21 McGough Cos. 31.6
22 Shook National Corp. 29.1
23 J.E. Dunn Construction Group 27.0
24 VECO Corp. 26.0
25 The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. 24.0
*BASED ON 2005 CONTRACTING REVENUE FROM TELECOMMUNICATIONS AS REPORTED IN ENR’S SURVEY OF LEADING CONTRACTORS AND DESIGN FIRMS.
The Top 25 in Telecommunications
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Bechtel 1,063.0
2 Conti Communications Inc. 61.5
3 Black & Veatch 30.3
4 Tetra Tech Inc. 24.5
5 CH2M HILL Cos. 19.5
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 5 in Towers and Antennae
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Fluor Corp. 201.3
2 Danella Companies Inc. 75.7
3 Tetra Tech Inc. 40.5
4 VECO Corp. 26.0
5 CH2M HILL Cos. 17.7
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 5 in Transmission Lines and Cables
RANK* FIRM $ MIL.
1 Holder Construction Co. 421.5
2 Structure Tone Inc. 287.0
3 Gilbane Building Co. 211.6
4 The Turner Corp. 170.3
5 DPR Construction Inc. 52.1
6 The Layton Cos. 45.7
7 Sundt Construction Inc. 39.6
8 Key Construction Inc. 37.0
9 McGough Cos. 31.6
10 J.E. Dunn Construction Group 27.0
*BASED ON SUPPLEMENTAL MARKET REVENUE DATA FROM 2005 PROVIDEDBY INDUSTRY FIRMS PARTICIPATING IN ENR’S SOURCEBOOK MARKET SURVEY.
The Top 10 in Data Centers and Web Hotels
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Top 400 DirectoryA
ABB Lummus GlobalMartin W. Gross, CEO1515 Broad St.Bloomfield NJ 07003(973) 893-1515
J.D. Abrams LPJon F. Abrams, President111 Congress Ave. #2400Austin TX 78701(512) 322-4000
Absher Construction Co.Daniel R. Absher, President1001 Shaw Rd.Puyallup WA 98372(253) 845-9544
ACI Construction ServicesFrank Cardinal, President601 N. Ashley Dr. #1100Tampa FL 33602(813) 490-4300
Adolfson & PetersonConstructionMichael Peterson, CEO6701 W. 23 St.Minneapolis MN 55426(952) 544-1561
Ajax Building Corp.William P. Byrne, President1080 Commerce Blvd.Midway FL 32343(850) 224-9571
Aker KvaernerInge Hanson, CEO3600 Briar Park Dr.Houston TX 77042(713) 988-2002
Alberici Corp.Gregory J. Kozicz, President 8800 PageSt. Louis MO 63114(314) 733-2000
The Alter GroupRonald M. Clarkson, President5500 W. Howard St.Skokie IL 60077(847) 676-4300
AMEC AmericasPeter Mason, Chairman4401 I St. NW #1000Washington DC 20005(202) 350-5700
American Bridge Co.Robert H. Luffy, President1000 American Bridge WayCoraopolis PA 15108(412) 631-1000
American Constructors Inc.Edwin Rodgers, President2900 Vanderbilt Pl.Nashville TN 37212(615) 329-0123
American Infrastructure Inc.A. Ross Myers, Chairman1805 Berks RdWorcester PA 19490(610) 222-8800
Americon Construction Inc.Eugene M. Cunnata, Principal44 W. 18 St.New York NY 10011(212) 274-0190
Ames Construction Inc.Richard J. Ames, CEO2000 Ames Dr.Burnsville MN 55306(952) 435-7106
S.J. Amoroso ConstructionDana C. McManus, CEO390 Bridge Pkwy.Redwood Shores CA 94065(650) 684-1900
Andersen Construction Co. Inc.Andy Andersen, CEO6712 N. Cutter Cir.Portland OR 97217(503) 283-6712
Anderson Columbia Co. Inc.Joe H. Anderson III, PresidentP.O. Box 1829Lake City FL 32056(386) 752-7585
Roy Anderson Corp.Roy Anderson III, PresidentP.O. Box 2Gulfport MS 39502(228) 896-4000
M.A. Angeliades Inc.Merkurios Angeliades, President5-44 47 Ave.Long Island City NY 11101(718) 786-5555
APACR. Kirk Randolph, President900 Ashwood Pkwy. #700Atlanta GA 30338-4780(770) 392-5300
ARCO/Murray Construction Cos.Richard R. Arnoldy, Chairman1750 S. Brentwood Blvd. #701St. Louis MO 63144(314) 963-0715
Armada Hoffler Construction Co.Eric Apperson, President222 Central Park Ave. #1200Virginia Beach VA 23462(757) 366-4000
The Atlantic GroupDennis McLaughlin, President 5426 Robin Hood Rd.Norfolk VA 23513(757) 857-6400
George W. Auch Co.David L. Hamilton, President735 S. Paddock St.Pontiac MI 48341(248) 334-2000
AUI Inc.Adam Q. Triolo, PresidentP.O. Box 9825Albuquerque NM 87119-9825(505) 242-4848
Austin IndustriesRonald J. Gafford, PresidentP.O. Box 1590Dallas TX 75221(214) 443-5500
AZCO Inc.Mark Loper, PresidentP.O. Box 567Appleton WI 54912(920) 734-5791
Azteca Enterprise GroupLuis Spinola, President2518 Chalk Hill Rd.Dallas TX 75212(214) 905-0612
BBalfour Beatty Construction Inc.Ed Phipps, President 999 Peachtree St. NEAtlanta GA 30309(404) 875-0356
Barnard Construction Co. Inc.Timothy Barnard, CEOP.O. Box 99Bozeman MT 59771-0099(406) 586-1995
douglas e. barnhart Inc.Douglas E. Barnhart, CEO10760 Thornmint Rd.San Diego CA 92127(858) 385-8200
Barnhill Contracting Co.R.E. Barnhill Jr., PresidentP.O. Box 1529Tarboro NC 27886(252) 823-1021
Barr & Barr Inc.Donald M. Barr, President460 W. 34 St., 16 Fl.New York NY 10001(212) 563-2330
Bartlett Cocke Gen. ContractorsDuane C. Pozza, Chairman8706 LockwaySan Antonio TX 78217(210) 655-1031
Barton Malow Co.Ben Maibach III, President26500 American Dr.Southfield MI 48034(248) 436-5000
Batson-Cook Co.Edmund C. Glover, ChairmanP.O. Box 151West Point GA 31833(706) 643-2500
Bayley ConstructionRonald E. Bayley, President 8005 SE 28 St.Mercer Island WA 98040-9004(206) 621-8884
BBL Construction Services LLCDonald R. Led Duke, CEO302 Washington Ave., Ext.Albany NY 12203(518) 452-8200
BE&K Inc.T. Michael Goodrich, Chairman2000 International Park Dr.Birmingham AL 35243(205) 972-6000
BechtelR.P. Bechtel, ChairmanP.O. Box 193965San Francisco CA 94119-3965(415) 768-1234
The Beck GroupHenry C. Beck III, ManagingDirector1807 Ross Ave. #500Dallas TX 75201(214) 303-6200
Ray Bell Construction Co. Inc.Ray Bell, CEOP.O. Box 363, 255 Wilson Pike Cir.Brentwood TN 37027(615) 373-4343
BernardsDouglas D. Bernards, President618 San Fernando Rd.San Fernando CA 91340(818) 898-1521
William A. Berry & Son Inc.John E. Kavanagh III, President99 Conifer Hill Dr.Danvers MA 01923(978) 774-1057
Big-D Corp.Jack D. Livingood, Chairman404 W. 400 SouthSalt Lake City UT 84101(801) 415-6000
Black & VeatchLen C. Rodman, Chairman11401 Lamar Ave.Overland Park KS 66211(913) 458-2000
BMW Constructors Inc.Thomas E. O’Brien, President1740 W. Michigan St.Indianapolis IN 46222-0210(317) 267-0400
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Top 400 DirectoryBoh Bros. Construction Co. LLCRobert S. Boh, PresidentP.O. Drawer 53266New Orleans LA 70153(504) 821-2400
The Boldt Co.Tom Boldt, CEO2525 N. Roemer Rd., P.O. Box 419Appleton WI 54912-0419(920) 739-6321
Bovis Lend LeasePeter Marchetto, CEO200 Park Ave.New York NY 10166(212) 592-6800
Bowen Engineering Corp.Robert L. Bowen, CEOP.O. Box 40729Indianapolis IN 46240(317) 842-2616
The Branch Group Inc.James C. Harrison IV, CEOP.O. Box 40004Roanoke VA 24022(540) 982-1678
Brasfield & Gorrie LLCM.M. Gorrie, Chairman729 S. 30 St.Birmingham AL 35233-2939(205) 328-4000
Brice Building Co. Inc.Felix M. Drennen III, CEO2311 Highland Ave. South #200Birmingham AL 35205-2911(205) 930-9911
BrindersonGary L. Brinderson, Chairman5455 Garden Grove Blvd. #500Westminster CA 92683(714) 230-3500
Brinkmann ConstructorsRobert Brinkmann, President16650 Chesterfield Grove Rd.#100Chesterfield MO 63376(636) 537-9700
Jeffrey M. Brown Assoc.Jeffrey M. Brown, CEO2337 Philmont Ave.Huntingdon Valley PA 19006(215) 938-5000
BSI Constructors Inc.Joseph F. Shaughnessy, Chairman6767 Southwest Ave.St. Louis MO 63143(314) 781-7820
Bulley & Andrews LLCAllan E. Bulley Jr., Chairman1755 W. Armitage Ave.Chicago IL 60622(773) 235-2433
Burns & McDonnellGreg Graves, President9400 Ward Pkwy.Kansas City MO 64114(816) 333-9400
BUCON Inc. (Butler Construction)Jan M. Lewis, SVP1540 Genessee St.Kansas City MO 64102(816) 245-6000
Butz Enterprises Inc.Lee A. Butz, CEOP.O. Box 509Allentown PA 18105(610) 395-6871
Thos. S. Byrne Ltd.John Avila Jr., President900 Summit Ave.Fort Worth TX 76102(817) 335-3394
CCaddell Construction Co. Inc.J. Kirby Caddell, Vice Chairman2700 Lagoon Park Dr.Montgomery AL 36109(334) 272-7723
Cajun Constructors Inc.Ken Jacob, PresidentP.O. Box 104Baton Rouge LA 70821(225) 753-5857
Capstone Building Corp.Jay Chapman, President3415 Independence Dr.Birmingham AL 35209(205) 803-5226
Cardi Corp.Antonio B. Cardi, President400 Lincoln Ave.Warwick RI 02888(401) 739-8300
Catamount Constructors Inc.Geoffrey G. Wormer, CEO1250 Bergen Pkwy. #B-200Evergreen CO 80439(303) 679-0087
CB&IPhilip K. Asherman, President2103 Research Forest Dr.The Woodlands TX 77380(832) 513-1000
CCC Group Inc.Arthur D. Huebner, PresidentP.O. Box 200350San Antonio TX 78220-0350(210) 661-4251
CDI Contractors LLCWilliam E. Clark, ChairmanP.O. Box 686Little Rock AR 72203(501) 666-4300
CDMThomas D. Furman Jr., Chairman50 Hampshire St.Cambridge MA 02139(617) 452-6000
CentexTimothy R. Eller, CEO2728 N. HarwoodDallas TX 75201(214) 981-5000
CH2M HILL Cos.Ralph R. Peterson, CEO9191 South Jamaica St.Englewood CO 80112(888) CH2M-HILL
Chanen Construction Co. Inc.Herman Chanen, Chairman3300 N. Third Ave., P.O. Box 33967Phoenix AZ 85067(602) 266-3600
Charter Builders Ltd.Charles E. DeVoe III, President1501 LBJ Fwy. #700Dallas TX 75234(972) 484-4888
Choate Construction Co.William Millard Choate, President8200 Roberts Dr. #600Atlanta GA 30350(678) 892-1200
The Christman Co.Steven F. Roznowski, President 408 Kalamazoo PlazaLansing MI 48933(517) 482-1488
Cianbro Corp.Peter G. Vigue, President P.O. Box 1000Pittsfield ME 04967(207) 487-3311
LPCiminelli Inc.Louis P. Ciminelli, Chairman369 Franklin St.Buffalo NY 14202(716) 855-1200
Cives Steel Co.Richard F. Connelly, President1825 Old Alabama Rd. #200Roswell GA 30076(770) 993-4424
Clancy & Theys Construction Co.Tim Clancy, President516 W. Cabarrus St.Raleigh NC 27603(919) 834-3601
Clark & Sullivan ConstructionBJ Sullivan, President905 Industrial WaySparks NV 89431(775) 355-8500
Clark ConstructionCharles J. Clark, President3535 Moores River Dr.P.O. Box 40087Lansing MI 48901(517) 372-0940
Clark GroupDan T. Montgomery, President 7500 Old Georgetown Rd.Bethesda MD 20814(301) 272-8100
John S. Clark Co. LLCC. Richard Vaughn, CEO210 Airport Rd., P.O. Box 1468Mt. Airy NC 27030(336) 789-1000
Clarkson Construction Co.W. E. Clarkson, President4133 Gardner Ave.Kansas City MO 64120(816) 483-8800
ClaycoRobert G. Clark, Chairman2199 Innerbelt Business Center Dr.St. Louis MO 63114(314) 429-5100
Cleveland Construction Inc.Jon D. Small, President8620 Tyler Blvd.Mentor OH 44060(440) 255-8000
Clune Construction Co.Michael T. Clune, President10 S. LaSalle St. #300Chicago IL 60643(312) 726-6103
Clyde Cos.Wilford W. Clyde, President252 W. Center St.Orem UT 84057(801) 802-6900
Coakley & Williams ConstructionTerrance C. Coakley, CEO16 S. Summit Ave. #300Gaithersburg MD 20877(301) 963-5000
Coastal Construction GroupThomas P. Murphy Jr., CEO5959 Blue Lagoon Dr. #200Miami FL 33126(305) 559-4900
Commercial Contracting Corp.Michael Hayes, VP4260 N. Atlantic Blvd.Auburn Hills MI 48326(248)209-0500
Conestoga-Rovers & Assoc.Ed Roberts, President2055 Niagara Falls Blvd.Niagara Falls NY 14304(716) 297-2160
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Top 400 DirectoryThe Conlan Co.Gary D. Condron, President1800 Parkway Pl. #1010Marietta GA 30067(770) 423-8000
Consigli Construction Co. Inc.Anthony M. Consigli, President197 Main St.Milford MA 01757(508) 473-2580
Conti Communications Inc.John J. McCann, CEO5 Johnson Dr. #4Raritan NJ 08869(908) 927-0939
The Conti GroupKurt G. Conti, PresidentOne Cragwood Rd.South Plainfield NJ 07080(908) 791-4800
Continental Building SystemsTodd M. Alexander, President150 E. Broad St.Columbus OH 43215-3601(614) 221-1800
Contrack InternationalKarim Camel-Toueg, President1001 N. 19 St. #1220
Arlington VA 22209(703) 358-8800
CORE Construction GroupWayne Baum, ChairmanP.O. Box 100Morton IL 61550(309) 263-0808
Corman Construction Inc.Arthur C. Cox Jr., VP12001 Guilford Rd.Annapolis Junction MD 20701(410) 792-9400
CRB Builders Craig Spidle, President11701 Borman Dr. #110St. Louis MO 63146(314) 997-0244
J. Fletcher Creamer & Son Inc.J. Fletcher Creamer, CEO101 E. BroadwayHackensack NJ 07601(201) 488-9800
Crossland Construction Co.Ivan E. Crossland Jr., CEO833 SE Ave., P.O. Box 45Columbus KS 66725(620) 429-1414
Crowder Construction Co.Otis A. Crowder, PresidentP.O. Box 30009Charlotte NC 28230(704) 372-3541
CSI Construction Co. Inc.Timothy J. Phelan, President540 Elkton Dr. #202Colorado Springs CO 80907(719) 522-0500
J.P. Cullen & Sons Inc.David J. Cullen, PresidentP.O. Box 1957Janesville WI 53547-1957(608) 754-6601
Current Builders Construction ServicesCharles P. Reid, CEO2251 Blount Rd.Pompano Beach FL 33069(954) 977-4211
The Cust-O-Fab Cos. LLCArlo B. DeKraai, President1900 N. 161 East Ave.Tulsa OK 74116(918) 234-4150
Cutler Associates Inc.Frederic Mulligan, President43 Harvard St.Worcester MA 01609(508) 757-7500
DDanella Cos. Inc.James D. Danella, Owner 2290 Butler PikePlymouth Meeting PA 19462(610) 828-6200
Danis Building Construction Co.John S. Danis, Chairman2 Riverplace #100Dayton OH 45405(937) 228-1225
D’Annunizio & Sons Inc.Michael A. D’Annunzio, President136 Central Ave.Clark NJ 07066(732) 574-1300
James G. Davis Construction Corp.James G. Davis, President12530 Parklawn Dr.Rockville MD 20852(301) 881-2990
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Day & Zimmermann GroupHal Yoh III, Chairman1818 Market St.Philadelphia PA 19103(215) 299-8000
S.D. Deacon Corp.Steven D. Deacon, CEO7745 Greenback Ln. #250Citrus Heights CA 95610(916) 969-0900
Denham-Blythe Co. Inc.Robert C. Mudd100 Trade St.Lexington KY 40511(859) 255-7405
Devcon Construction Inc.Gary Filizetti, President690 Gibraltar Dr.Milpitas CA 95035(408) 942-8200
Dick Construction Co.Stephen D’Angelo, PresidentP.O. Box 10896Pittsburgh PA 15236-0896(412) 384-1000
P.J. Dick-Trumbull-LindyClifford R. Rowe, CEO1020 Lebanon Rd.West Miflin PA 15122(412) 462-9300
The Dietze Construction GroupRalph A. Dietze, CEO3859 Centerview Dr. #200Chantilly VA 20151(703) 464-9800
Dimeo Construction Co.Bradford S. Dimeo, President75 Chapman St.Providence RI 02905(401) 781-9800
DooleyMack Constructors Inc.William R. Dooley, CEO5800 Lakewood Ranch Blvd.Sarasota FL 34240(941) 921-4636
Donohoe Construction Co.Steven J. Donohoe, President2101 Wisconsin Ave. NWWashington DC 20007(202) 333-0880
Doster Construction Co. Inc.Thomas E. Doster III, Chairman 2100 International Park Dr.Birmingham AL 35243(205) 443-3800
DPR Construction Inc.Douglas E. Woods, President1450 Veterans Blvd.Redwood City CA 94063(650) 474-1450
L.F. Driscoll Co.John J. Donnelly, CEO9 Presidential Blvd.Bala Cynwyd PA 19004(610) 668-0950
C.W. DriverDana Roberts, President468 N. Rosemead Blvd.Pasadena CA 91107(626) 351-8800
Duke ConstructionSteven R. Kennedy, President600 E. 96 St. #100Indianapolis IN 46420(317) 808-6000
J.E. Dunn Construction GroupTerrence P. Dunn, President929 HolmesKansas City MO 64106(816) 474-8600
EEarth Tech Inc.Alan Krusi, CEO300 Oceangate #700Long Beach CA 90802(562) 951-2000
EDGE Development Inc.Kenneth Dayne Wagoner, Principal27368 Via Industria #101Temecula CA 92590(951) 296-0776
EDiS Construction ManagersE. Andrew DiSabatino Jr., CEO110 S. Poplar St. #400Wilmington DE 19801(302) 421-5700
Elkhorn HoldingsSean Sullivan, President71 Allegiance Cir.Evanston WY 82930(307) 789-1595
Elkins Constructors Inc.Barry L. Allred, President701 W. Adams St.Jacksonville FL 32204(904) 353-6500
EMJ Corp.James F. Sattler, CEO2030 Hamilton Place Blvd. #200Chattanooga TN 37421(423) 855-1550
Encore Construction Co.Patrick T. Rainey, President370 E. Crown Point Rd.Winter Garder FL 34787(407) 877-5903
Marshall Erdman & AssociatesScott Ransom, CEO 5117 University Ave.Madison WI 53705(608) 238-0211
Engineered Structures Inc.Thomas D. Hill, President12400 W. Overland Rd.Boise ID 83709(208) 362-3040
FThe Facility GroupRobert L. Moultrie, Chairman2233 Lake Park Dr.Smyrna GA 30080(770) 437-2700
Fagen Inc.Roland Fagen, CEO501 W. Hwy 212Granite Falls MN 56241(320) 564-3324
FaulknerUSAMark Schultz, President1700 Rio Grande St.Austin TX 78701(512) 652-4000
FCL Builders Inc.Michael J. Boro, President1150 Spring Lake Dr.Itasca IL 60143(630) 773-0050
J.H. Findorff & Son Inc.Richard M. Lynch, President300 S. Bedford St.Madison WI 53703(608) 257-5321
Flatiron ConstructionGarry K. Crabtree, President10090 I-25 Frontage Rd.Longmont CO 80504(303) 485-4050
The Flintco Cos. Inc.Tom Maxwell, President1624 W. 21 St.Tulsa OK 74107(918) 587-8451
Fluor Corp.Alan L. Boeckmann, ChairmanOne Enterprise Dr.Aliso Viejo CA 92656-2606(949) 349-2000
FNF ConstructionJed S. Billings, President115 S. 48 St.Tempe AZ 85281(480) 784-2910
Fontaine Bros. Inc.Lester E. Fontaine, CEO510 Cottage St.Springfield MA 01104(413) 781-2020
Max Foote Construction Co. Inc.Max Foote, PresidentP.O. Box 1208Mandeville LA 70470(985) 624-8569
Forrester Construction Co.David S. Forrester, CEO12231 Parklawn Dr.Rockville MD 20852(301) 816-1700
Foster Wheeler Ltd.Raymond J. Milchovich, ChairmanPerryville Corporate ParkClinton NJ 08809-4000(908) 730-4000
T.W. Frierson Contractor Inc.Joe Street, President1330 Murfreesboro Rd.Nashville TN 37217(615) 367-1333
Frontier-Kemper Constructors Inc.Galyn G. Rippentrop, CEO1695 Allen Rd.Evansville IN 47710(812) 426-2741
Fru-Con Construction Corp.Stefan Roth, President15933 Clayton Rd.St. Louis MO 63011(636) 391-6700
FTR International Inc.Nizar Katbi, President400 Exchange #150Irvine CA 92602(714) 389-5656
Fusco Corp.Edmund J. Fusco Sr., CEO555 Long Wharf Dr.New Haven CT 06511(203) 777-7451
GGamma Construction Co.Keith Williams, President2808 Joanel St.Houston TX 77027(713) 963-0086
Garco Construction Inc.James T. Welsh, PresidentE. 4114 BroadwaySpokane WA 99202(509) 535-4688
Garney Holding Co.Robert Millwee, CEO1333 NW Vivion Rd.Kansas City MO 64118(816) 741-4600
Gilbane Building Co.Thomas F. Gilbane Jr., Chairman7 Jackson WalkwayProvidence RI 02903(401) 456-5800
Global PerformanceDennis Braasch, President7005 Pelham Rd., Ste. AGreenville SC 29615(864) 288-3009
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Top 400 DirectoryGotham Construction Co. LLCJoel I. Picket, CEO1010 Avenue of the AmericasNew York NY 10018(212) 599-0520
Granger Construction Co.Alton L. Granger, Chairman6267 Aurelius Rd., P.O. Box 22187Lansing MI 48909(517) 393-1670
Granite Construction Inc.William G. Dorey, President 585 W. Each St.Watsonville CA 95076(831) 724-1011
Gray ConstructionJim Gray, President10 Quality St.Lexington KY 40507(859) 281-5000
GraycorMelvin Gray, Chairman One Graycor Dr.Homewood IL 60430(708) 206-0500
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Corp. LLCDouglas B. Mackie, President2122 York Rd.Oak Brook IL 60523(630) 574-3000
Grunley Construction Co. Inc.Kenneth M. Grunley, President15020 Shady Grove Rd. #S-500Rockville MD 20850(240) 399-2000
HH+M Co. Inc.David Fite, Chairman50 Security Dr.Jackson TN 38305(731) 664-6300
Hagerman Construction Corp.Mark F. Hagerman, President510 W. Washington Blvd.Fort Wayne IN 46853(260) 424-1470
The Hanover Co.J. Murray Bowden, Co-Chairman 5847 San Felipe #3600Houston TX 77056(713) 267-2100
B.L. Harbert InternationalBilly L. Harbert Jr., President820 Shades Creek Pkwy. #3000 Birmingham AL 35209(205) 802-2800
Harbour Contractors Inc.Patrick C. Harbour, President215 W. Main St.Plainfield IL 60544(815) 254-5500
Harkins Builders Inc.Blase Cooke, CEO2201 Warwick WayMarriottsville MD 21104(410) 750-2600
Harper Industries Inc.Billy Harper, CEO616 NorthviewPaducah KY 42001(270) 442-2753
M.J. Harris Inc.Michael J. Harris, President1 Riverchase Ridge #300Birmingham AL 35244(205) 380-6800
Harvey Construction Corp.John Zahr, President10 Harvey Rd.Bedford NH 03110(603) 624-4600
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David E. Harvey Builders Inc.David E. Harvey Jr., President3630 WestchaseHouston TX 77042(713) 783-8710
Haselden Construction LLCEd J. Haselden, President6950 S. Potomac St.Centennial CO 80112(303) 751-1478
The Haskell Co.Steven T. Halverson, President111 Riverside Ave.Jacksonville FL 32202(904) 791-4500
Hathaway DinwiddieConstructionP. Gregory Cosko, President275 Battery St. #300San Francisco CA 94111(415) 986-2718
Hawaiian Dredging Construction Co. Inc.William Wilson, President614 Kapahulu Ave.Honolulu HI 96815(808) 735-3211
Hawkins Construction Co.Fred H. Hawkins Jr., CEO2516 Deer Park Blvd.Omaha NE 68105(402) 342-1607
Haydon Building Corp.Gary T. Haydon, CEO4640 E. McDowell Rd.Phoenix AZ 85008(602) 296-1496
HBD Contracting Inc.Michael J. Perry, President5517 Manchester Ave.St. Louis MO 63110(314) 781-8000
HBE Corp.Fred S. Kummer, President11330 Olive Blvd.St. Louis MO 63141(314) 567-9000
The Henderson Corp.Edward F. McMahon, President575 State Hwy. 28Raritan NJ 08869(908) 685-1300
Hensel Phelps Construction Co.Jerry L. Morgensen, ChairmanP.O. Box 0Greeley CO 80632(970) 352-6565
Herzog Contracting Corp.Stanley M. Herzog, CEOP.O. Box 1089St. Joseph MO 64502(816) 233-9001
Hill & Wilkinson Ltd.Greg Wilkinson, CEO800 Klein Rd. #100Plano TX 75074(214) 299-4300
Hisaw & Associates General ContractorsRichard L. Hisaw, CEO3116 Kellyway Dr. #116Carrollton TX 75006(972) 380-4448
HITT Contracting Inc.Brett R. Hitt, Co-President2704 Dorr Ave.Fairfax VA 22031(703) 846-9000
HK Systems Inc.John W. Splude, CEOP.O. Box 1512Milwaukee WI 53201-1512(262) 860-7000
Hoar Construction LLCRobert O. Burton, PresidentTwo Metroplex Dr. #400Birmingham AL 35209(205) 803-2121
Hoffman Corp.Wayne A. Drinkward, President805 SW Broadway #2100Portland OR 97205(503) 221-8811
Holder Construction Co.Thomas M. Holder, Chairman3333 Riverwood Pkwy. #400Atlanta GA 30339-3304(770) 988-3000
E.W. Howell Co. Inc.Howard L. Rowland, President113 Crossways Park Dr.Woodbury NY 11797(516) 921-7100
HRH Construction LLCGregory Cuneo, Chairman 50 Main St.White Plains NY 10606(914) 993-5500
The Hubbard GroupLuc Bodson, Chairman1936 Lee Rd.Winter Park FL 32789(407) 645-5500
Hunt Construction Group Inc.Robert G. Hunt, Vice Chairman6720 N. Scottsdale Rd. #300Scottsdale AZ 85253(317) 227-7800
Hunt Building Co. Ltd.Woody L. Hunt, Chairman4401 N. Mesa St.El Paso TX 79902(915) 533-1122
Hunter Contracting Co.Steve Padilla, President701 N. Cooper Rd.Gilbert AZ 85233(480) 892-0521
Hunzinger Construction Co.John C. Hunzinger, President21100 Enterprise Ave.Brookfield WI 53045(262) 797-0797
IAngelo Iafrate Cos.Robert A. Tintsman,Executive Chairman26400 SherwoodWarren MI 48091(586) 756-1070
IHC Construction Cos. LLCThomas S. Rakow, Chairman1500 Executive Dr.Elgin IL 60123(847) 742-1516
IMC ConstructionThomas L. Williams, Chairman9 Old Lincoln Hwy. #300Malvern PA 19355(610) 889-3600
Industrial Contractors Inc.Alan W. Braun, CEO401 NW First St.Evansville IN 47708(812) 423-7832
Insituform TechnologiesThomas Rooney, President702 Spirit 40 Park Dr.Chesterfield MO 63005-1195(636) 530-8000
INTECH ConstructionCraig J. Sabatino, Co-Owner3001 Market St.Philadelphia PA 19104(215) 243-2000
Interstate Highway ConstructionJ. Kenyon Schaeffer, President7135 S. Tucson WayEnglewood CO 80112(303) 790-9100
JJacobsNoel G. Watson, CEOP.O. Box 7084Pasadena CA 91109-7084(626) 578-3500
Jacobsen Construction Co. Inc.Lonnie M. Bullard, President3131 W. 2210 SouthSalt Lake City UT 84119(801) 973-0500
Jay Cashman Inc.Dale H. Pyatt, President549 South St.P.O. Box 692396Quincy MA 02269-2396(617) 890-0600
The Jaynes Cos.Donald A.M. Power, President2906 Broadway NEAlbuquerque NM 87107(505) 345-8591
Joseph Jingoli & Son Inc.Joseph R. Jingoli Jr., CEO3131 Princeton PikeLawrenceville NJ 08648(609) 896-3111
GE Johnson Construction Co.James M. Johnson, President25 N. Cascade Ave. #400Colorado Springs CO 80903(719) 473-5321
C.F. Jordan Investments LLPDarren G. Woody, CEO 7700 C. F. Jordan Dr.El Paso TX 79912(915) 877-3333
W. M. Jordan Co. Inc.John R. Lawson II, President11010 Jefferson Ave.Newport News VA 23601(757) 596-6341
Judlau ContractingThomas Iovino, President26-15 Ulmer St.College Point NY 11354(718) 321-1818
KM.B. Kahn Construction Co. Inc.William H. Neely, President101 Flintlake Rd.Columbia SC 29223(803) 736-2950
Kaiser Foundation Health Plan Inc.Frank Farago, Regional Mgr.1240 N. Lakeview Ave. #200Anaheim CA 92807(714) 970-4500
Kajima Construction ServicesKenji Hara, President3500 Piedmont Rd. NE #700Atlanta GA 30305(404) 812-8600
KBRWilliam P. Utt, President4100 Clinton Dr.Houston TX 77020-6237(713) 753-3011
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Top 400 DirectoryKBS Inc.William A. Paulette, President8050 Kimway Dr.Richmond VA 23228(804) 262-0100
Keating Building Corp.Daniel J. Keating III, Chairman1600 Arch St. #300Philadelphia PA 19103(610) 668-4100
Kenny ConstructionJohn E. Kenny Jr., President250 Northgate Pkwy.Wheeling IL 60090(847) 541-8200
Key Construction Inc.Kenneth A. Wells, CEO741 W. SecondWichita KS 67203(316) 263-9515
Kiewit Corp.Bruce E. Grewcock, President1000 Kiewit PlazaOmaha NE 68131(402) 342-2052
Kinsley Construction Inc.Robert A. Kinsley, CEO2700 Water St., P.O. Box 2886
York PA 17405(717) 741-3841
Kitchell Corp.William C. Schubert, President1707 E. Highland Ave. #100Phoenix AZ 85016(602) 264-4411
Klinger Cos. Inc.John W. Gleeson, PresidentP.O. Box 8800Sioux City IA 51102-8800(712) 233-3240
Knutson Construction ServicesSteven O. Curry, CEO5500 Wayzata Blvd. #300Minneapolis MN 55416(763) 546-1400
Albert C. Kobayashi Inc.Russel Young, President94-535 Ukee St.Waipahu HI 96797(808) 671-6460
Kokosing Construction Co. Inc.W. Brian Burgett, PresidentP.O. Box 226Fredericktown OH 43019(740) 694-6315
Konover Construction Corp.Michael Kolakowski, President30 Batterson Park Rd.Farmington CT 06032(860) 284-7110
The Korte Co.Todd J. Korte, President700 St. Louis Union Station #200St. Louis MO 63103(314) 231-3700
Kraemer Brothers LLCNorman Kraemer, CEO925 Park Ave.P.O. Box 219Plain WI 53577(608) 546-2411
Edward Kraemer & Sons Inc.David Kraemer, CEO1 Plainview Rd.Plain WI 53577(608) 546-2311
Kraft Construction Co. Inc.Fred Pezeshkan, President2606 Horsehoe Dr. SouthNaples FL 34104(239) 643-6000
Kraus-Anderson Construction Co.Bruce W. Engelsma, Chairman525 S. 8 St.Minneapolis MN 55404(612) 332-7281
LThe Lane Construction Corp.Robert E. Alger, President965 E. Main St.Meriden CT 06450(203) 235-3351
Lathrop Construction Associates Inc.Roy A. Van Pelt, Chairman4001 Park Rd.Benicia CA 94510(707) 746-8000
Lauth Group Inc.Robert L. Lauth, Chairman401 Pennsylvania Pkwy.Indianapolis IN 46280(317) 848-6500
Layne Christensen Co.Andrew B. Schmitt, President1900 Shawnee Mission Pkwy.Mission Woods KS 66205(913) 362-0510
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The Layton Cos.David S. Layton, President9090 S. Sandy Pkwy.Sandy UT 84070(801) 568-9090
Lease Crutcher LewisBill Lewis, President107 Spring St.Seattle WA 98104-1052(206) 622-0500
LeChase Construction Services LLCR. Wayne LeChase, CEO300 Trolley Blvd.Rochester NY 14606(585) 254-3510
Leopardo Cos. Inc.James A. Leopardo, CEO5200 Prairie Stone Pkwy.Hoffman Estates IL 60192(847) 783-3000
Lee Lewis Construction Inc.Lee Lewis, CEO7810 Orlando Ave.Lubbock TX 79423(806) 797-8400
LinbeckCharles L. Greco, President3810 W. AlabamaHouston TX 77027-2500(713) 621-2350
Lunda Construction Co.Larry Lunda, CEO620 Gebhardt Rd.P.O. Box 669Black River Falls WI 54615-0669(715) 284-9491
Lusardi Construction Co.Scott Free, CEO1570 Linda Vista Dr.San Marcos CA 92078(760) 744-3133
Lydig Construction Inc.Larry J. Swartz, President11001 E. MontgomerySpokane WA 99206(509) 534-0451
Lyles Construction GroupWilliam M. Lyles III, PresidentP.O. Box 4376Fresno CA 93744(559) 441-1900
MM+W Zander US Operations Inc.Mike Bove, President1001 Klein Rd. #400Plano TX 75074(415) 442-1881
Macomber BuildersJohn D. Macomber, PresidentOne Design Center Pl. #600Boston MA 02210(617) 478-6200
Manhattan Construction Co.Leonard Rejcek, President5601 S. 122 East Ave.Tulsa OK 74146(918) 583-6900
Manson Construction Co.Eric V. Haug, President5209 E. Marginal Way SouthSeattle WA 98134(206) 762-0850
March AssociatesLouis D. March Sr., Chairman601 Hamburg TurnpikeWayne NJ 07470(973) 904-0213
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Top 400 DirectoryMarnell Corrao Assoc.Anthony A. Marnell II, Chairman 222 Via Marnell WayLas Vegas NV 89119(702) 739-2000
Martin-Harris ConstructionFrank E. Martin, President3030 S. Highland Dr.Las Vegas NV 89109(702) 385-5257
Mascaro Construction Co. LPJohn C. Mascaro, President1720 Metropolitan St.Pittsburgh PA 15233(412) 321-4901
Matrix Service Co.Michael Hall, President10701 E. Ute St.Tulsa OK 74116-1517(918) 838-8822
Matt Construction Corp.Paul J. Matt, CEO9814 Norwalk Blvd. #100Santa Fe Springs CA 90670(562) 903-2277
McCarthy Building Cos. Inc.Michael D. Bolen, CEO1341 N. Rock Hill Rd.St. Louis MO 63124(314) 968-3300
McCrory Building Co. Inc.John S. McCrory, President3512 7 Ave. SouthBirmingham AL 35222(205) 251-2200
McGough Cos.Thomas J. McGough, Jr., President2737 Fairview Ave. N.St. Paul MN 55113-1372(651) 633-5050
James McHugh Construction Co.James P. McHugh, CEO1737 S. Michigan Ave.Chicago IL 60616(312) 986-8000
The McShane Cos.James A. McShane, CEO9550 W. Higgins Rd. #200Rosemont IL 60018(847) 292-4300
MEB General ContractorsGeorge B. Clarke IV, President4016 Holland Blvd.Chesapeake VA 23323(757) 487-5858
Messer ConstructionPeter S. Strange, Chairman5158 Fishwick Dr.Cincinnati OH 45216(513) 242-1541
Michels Corp.Ruth L. Michels, CEO817 W. Main St.Brownsville WI 53006-0128920-583-3132
The Middlesex Cos.Robert W. Pereira, ChairmanOne Spectacle Pond Rd.Littleton MA 01460(978) 742-4400
W.G. MillsWalter G. Mills, CEO3301 Whitfield Ave.Sarasota FL 34243(941) 758-6441
Miron Construction Co. Inc.David G. Voss Jr., Principal1471 McMahon Dr.Neenah WI 54956(920) 969-7000
Monarch Construction Co.Ronald A. Koetters, Chairman1654 Sherman Ave.P.O. Box 12249Cincinnati OH 45212-02249(513) 351-6900
Morganti Group Inc.Nabil Takla, EVP100 Mill Plain Rd.Danbury CT 06811(203) 743-2675
Morley BuildersMark Benjamin, CEO2901 28 St. #100Santa Monica CA 90405(310) 399-1600
M.A. Mortenson Co.M. A. Mortenson Jr., Chairman700 Meadow Ln. NorthMinneapolis MN 55422(763) 522-2100
Moss & Associates LLCBob Moss, President2101 N. Andrews Ave. #300Ft. Lauderdale FL 33311(954) 524-5678
MWHRobert Uhler, CEO380 Interlocken Crescent #200Broomfield CO 80021(303) 533-1900
NNabholz Construction Corp.Bill Hannah, CEO612 Garland St., P.O. Box 2090Conway AR 72033-2090(501) 505-5800
New Enterprise Stone & LimeDonald L. Detwiler, PresidentP.O. Box 77New Enterprise PA 16664(814) 766-2211
Nibbi Brothers ConstructionLarry Nibbi, CEO180 Hubbell St.San Francisco CA 94107(415) 863-1820
Northern Improvement Co.Thomas McCormick, PresidentP.O. Box 2846Fargo ND 58108(701) 277-1225
The Norwood Co.John E. Farrell, President530 Brandywine Pkwy.West Chester PA 19380(610) 431-3500
Nova Group Inc.Ronald M. Fedrick, PresidentP.O. Box 4050Napa CA 94558(707) 257-3200
OO&G Industries Inc.Gregory S. Oneglia, Vice Chairman112 Wall St.Torrington CT 06790(860) 489-9261
O’Brien & GereTerry L. Brown, CEO5000 Brittonfield Pkwy.Syracuse NY 13057(315) 437-6100
O’Connor ConstructorsThomas H. O’Connor Jr., President45 Industrial Dr.Canton MA 02021(617) 364-9000
Odebrecht Construction Inc.Gilberto Neves, CEO201 Alhambra Cir. #1400Coral Gables FL 33134(305) 341-8800
Okland ConstructionJ. Randy Okland, President1978 SW TempleSalt Lake City UT 84115(801) 486-0144
JM Olson Corp.John M. Olson, Chairman26210 Harper Ave.St. Clair Shores MI 48081(586) 771-9330
Oltmans Construction Co.Joseph O. Oltmans II, Chairman10005 Mission Mill Rd.Whittier CA 90608-0985(562) 948-4242
O’Neil Industries Inc.Richard J. Erickson, CEO2751 N. Clybourn Ave.Chicago IL 60614(773) 755-1611
Opus GroupMark Rauenhorst, CEO10350 Bren Rd. WestMinnetonka MN 55343(952) 656-4444
Orion Marine GroupRussell B. Inserra, President12550 FuquaHouston TX 77034(713) 852-6500
C. Overaa & Co.Gerald D. Overaa, CEO200 Parr Blvd.Richmond CA 94801(510) 234-0926
Owen-Ames-Kimball Co.William Schoonveld, President300 Ionia NWGrand Rapids MI 49503-2507(616) 456-1521
PPanattoni Construction Inc.Denny Boom, Executive Director8745 Folsom Blvd. #150Sacramento CA 95826(916) 340-2400
Paric Corp.P. Joseph McKee III, President1001 Boardwalk Springs Pl.O’Fallon MO 63368(636) 561-9500
ParsonsJames F. McNulty, Chairman100 W. Walnut St.Pasadena CA 91124(626) 440-2000
PCL Construction Enterprises Inc.P.E. Beaupre’, President2000 S. Colo. Blvd. #2-500Denver CO 80222-7928(303) 365-6591
The Penta Building Group Inc.Jeffrey Ehret, President181 E. Warm Springs Rd.Las Vegas NV 89119(702) 614-1678
Pepper Construction GroupJ. David Pepper, Chairman 643 N. OrleansChicago IL 60610(312) 266-4700
Performance Contractors Inc.Art E. Favre, PresidentP.O. Box 83630Baton Rouge LA 70884-3630(225) 751-4156
Perini Corp.Ronald N. Tutor, Chairman73 Mt. Wayte Ave.Framingham MA 01701-9160(508) 628-2000
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Gerald H. Phipps Inc.Charles T. Graft, President1530 W. 13 Ave.Denver CO 80204(303) 571-5377
The Pike Co. Inc.Thomas F. Judson Jr., ChairmanOne Circle St.Rochester NY 14607(585) 271-5256
Pioneer General ContractorsTimothy Schowalter, CEO550 Kirtland St. SWGrand Rapids MI 49507(616) 247-6966
Pizzagalli ConstructionPeter Bernhardt, President50 Joy Dr.P.O. Box 2009S. Burlington VT 05407-2009(802) 658-4100
Plant Construction Co. LPDavid G. Plant, General Partner300 Newhall St.San Francisco CA 94124(415) 285-0500
Power Construction Co.Jeff Karp, President2360 Palmer Dr.Schaumburg IL 60173(847) 925-1300
Primoris Corp.Brian Pratt, CEO26000 Commercentre Dr.Lake Forest CA 92630(949) 598-9242
QQ & D Construction Inc.Norman L. Dianda, President1050 S. 21 St.Sparks NV 89431(775) 786-2677
Frederick Quinn Corp.Charles E. Metzler, CEO103 S. Church St.Addison IL 60101(630) 628-8500
RR&O ConstructionDale C. Campbell, President933 Wall Ave.Ogden UT 84404(801) 627-1403
Railroad Construction Family of Cos.Alfonso Daloisio Jr., President75-77 Grove St.Paterson NJ 07503(973) 684-0362
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Top 400 DirectoryE.E. Reed ConstructionE.E. Reed, CEO333 Commerce Green Blvd.Sugar Land TX 77478(281) 933-4000
Remedial Construction Services LPGene R. Birdwell, CEO9720 DerringtonHouston TX 77064(281) 955-2442
Oscar Renda Contracting Inc.Oscar Renda, President522 Benson Ln.Roanoke TX 76262(817) 491-2703
Rentenbach Engineering Co.Donald W. Freeman, President2400 Sutherland Ave.Knoxville TN 37919(865) 546-2440
Rieth-Riley Construction Co. Inc.Ronald Guy Pope, President3626 Elkhart Rd.P.O. Box 477Goshen IN 46527-0477(574) 875-5183
River City Construction LLCJames J. Barr, President101 Hoffer Ln.E. Peoria IL 61611(309) 694-3120
RMCI Inc.James R. Giannelli, PresidentP.O. Box 91447Albuquerque NM 87199(505) 345-0008
The Robins & Morton GroupBill Morton, President400 Shades Creek Pkwy. #200Birmingham AL 35209(205) 870-1000
Roche Constructors Inc.Thomas J. Roche, President361 71 Ave.Greeley CO 80634(970) 356-3611
Rockford Blacktop ConstructionMyron Rafferty, PresidentP.O. Box 2071Loves Park IL 61130(815) 654-4700
Rockford Construction Co. Inc.John J. Wheeler, CEO5540 Glenwood Hills Pkwy SEGrand Rapids MI 49512(616) 285-6933
Rodgers Builders Inc.B. D. Rodgers, Chairman5701 N. Sharon Amity Rd.Charlotte NC 28215(704) 537-6044
Roebbelen Contracting Inc.Terence J. Street, President1241 Hawks Flight Ct.El Dorado Hills CA 95762(916) 939-4000
ROEL Construction Co.Wayne Hickey, CEOP.O. Box 80216San Diego CA 92138(619) 297-4156
Rogers-O’Brien Construction Co.Preston L. McAfee, CEO1901 Regal RowDallas TX 75235(214) 962-3000
Roncelli Inc.Gary Roncelli, President6471 Metro Pkwy.Sterling Heights MI 48312(586) 264-2060
The Rudolph/Libbe Cos. Inc.William D. Rudolph, President6494 Latcha Rd.Walbridge OH 43465(419) 241-5000
The Ruhlin Co.James L. Ruhlin, President6931 Ridge Rd.Sharon Center OH 44274(330) 239-2800
Russell Construction Co. Inc.James V. Russell, President4600 E. 53 St.Davenport IA 52807(563) 459-4600
H.J. Russell & Co.Michael Russell, CEO504 Fair St.Atlanta GA 30313(404) 330-0844
Ryan Cos. US Inc.James R. Ryan, CEO50 S. Tenth St. #300Minneapolis MN 55403(612) 492-4000
SS&B Holdings Ltd. and AffiliatesW.A. Brookshire, ChairmanP.O. Box 266245Houston TX 77207(713) 645-4141
Safety & Ecology Holdings Corp.Christopher P. Leichtweis, CEO2800 Solway Rd.Knoxville TN 37931(865) 690-0501
Satterfield & PontikesConstructionGeorge A. Pontikes Jr., President6617 Flintlock Rd.Houston TX 77040(713) 996-1300
Saunders Construction Inc.John P. Beebe, President6950 S. Jordan Rd.Centennial CO 80112(303) 699-9000
CG Schmidt Inc.Richard L. Schmidt, CEO11777 W. Lake Park Dr.Milwaukee WI 53224-3021(414) 577-1093
F.J. Sciame Construction Co. Inc.Frank J. Sciame Jr., President80 South St.New York NY 10038(212) 232-2200
SCS EngineersJames J. Walsh, President3900 Kilroy Airport Way #100Long Beach CA 90806-6816(562) 426-9544
Sellen Construction Co. Inc.Robert E. Barrett, Co-ChairmanP.O. Box 9970227 Westlake Ave. NorthSeattle WA 98109(206) 682-7770
SEMA Construction Inc.Thomas G. Ames, CEO7353 S. Eagle St.Centennial CO 80112(303) 627-2600
Sevenson Environmental ServicesMichael A. Elia, President2749 Lockport Rd.Niagara Falls NY 14305(716) 284-0431
Shaw ConstructionSteve H. Meyer, President300 Kalamath St.Denver CO 80223(303) 825-4740
The Shaw Group Inc.J.M. Bernhard Jr., Chairman4171 Essen Ln.Baton Rouge LA 70809(225) 932-2500
Shawmut Design andConstructionThomas E. Goemaat, President560 Harrison Ave.Boston MA 02118(617) 622-7000
Sheehan Pipe Line Construction Co.R. David Sheehan Jr., CEO2431 E. 61 St. #700Tulsa OK 74136(918) 747-3471
Shelco Inc.D. Edwin Rose, President5016 Parkway Plaza #100Charlotte NC 28217(704) 367-5600
Shiel Sexton Co. Inc.Andrew K. Shiel, Chairman902 N. Capitol Ave.Indianapolis IN 46204(317) 423-6000
Shimmick Construction Co. Inc.Paul Cocotis, President24200 Clawiter Rd.Hayward CA 94545(510) 293-1100
Shook National Corp.Vincent M. Corrado, CEO4977 Northcutt Pl.Dayton OH 45414(937) 276-6666
Skanska USA Inc.Stuart E. Graham, President16-16 Whitestone Expwy.Whitestone NY 11357(718) 747-3454
Sletten Cos.Erik J. Sletten, PresidentP.O. Box 2467Great Falls MT 59403(406) 761-7920
Sloan Construction Co. Inc.Hoyle T. Thompson, President250 Plemmons Rd.Duncan SC 29334(864) 416-0200
C.D. Smith ConstructionGary M. Smith, President889 E. Johnson St.Fond Du Lac WI 54935(920) 924-2900
The George Sollitt Construction Co.Howard Strong, President790 N. Central Ave.Wood Dale IL 60191(630) 860-7333
Soltek PacificStephen W. Thompson, CEO2424 Congress St.San Diego CA 92110(619) 296-6247
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Top 400 DirectorySpaulding & Slye Construction Co. Inc.James B. Karman, Chairman255 State St.Boston MA 02109(617) 523-8000
SpawGlass Holding LPFred Raley, President9331 Corporate Dr.Selma TX 78154(210) 651-9000
Staker & Parson Cos.John W. Parson, PresidentP.O. Box 3429Ogden UT 84409(801) 731-1111
The Stellar GroupRonald H. Foster Jr., CEO2900 Hartley Rd.Jacksonville FL 32257(904) 260-2900
Structure Tone Inc.James K. Donaghy, Chairman770 BroadwayNew York NY 10003-9522(212) 481-6100
Struever Bros.Eccles & Rouse Inc.Carl William Struever, President1040 Hull St. #200Baltimore MD 21230(443) 573-4000
Suffolk Construction Co. Inc.John F. Fish, President65 Allerton St.Boston MA 02119(617) 445-3500
Sukut Construction Inc.Michael Crawford, President4010 W. Chandler Ave.Santa Ana CA 92704-5202(800) 339-6024
Summit BuildersJeffrey C. Stone, President3333 E. Camelback Rd. #122Phoenix AZ 85018(602) 840-7700
Sundt Construction Inc.J. Doug Pruitt, Chairman1501 W. Fountainhead Pkwy. #600Tempe AZ 85282(480) 293-3000
Superior Construction Co. Inc.John L. Largura, Chairman2045 E. Dunes Hwy.P.O. Box 64888Gary IN 46401-0888(219) 886-3728
Swinerton Inc.Gordon W. Marks, Chairman260 Townsend St.San Francisco CA 94107(415) 421-2980
TTarlton Corp.Tracy Elsperman Hart, President5500 W. Park Ave.St. Louis MO 63110(314) 633-3300
Teichert ConstructionJud Riggs, ChairmanP.O. Box 15002Sacramento CA 95851-1002(916) 484-3011
TellepsenHoward T. Tellepsen Jr., President777 Benmar #400Houston TX 77060(281) 447-8100
Teng Affiliated Cos.Ivan J. Dvorak, President205 N. Michigan Ave.Chicago IL 60601(312) 616-0000
Terminal Construction Corp.Donald N. Dinallo, President215 State Hwy. 17 SouthP.O. Box 348Wood-Ridge NJ 07075(201) 939-9150
Tetra Tech Inc.Li-San Hwang, CEO3475 E. Foothill Blvd.Pasadena CA 91107(626) 351-4664
TIC Holdings Inc.R.W. McKenzie, CEO2211 Elk River Rd.Steamboat Springs CO 80487(970) 879-2561
TLT Construction Corp.Thomas V. Kostinden, President1 Pope St.Wakefield MA 01880(781) 438-4100
Torcon Inc.Benedict J. Torcivia Jr.,Co-President214 E. Grove St.Westfield NJ 07091(908) 232-8900
The Tower Group Inc.Anthony Burke, CEO405 SW 148 Ave. #1Davie FL 33325(954) 476-3200
Traylor Bros. Inc.Thomas W. Traylor, CEOP.O. Box 5165Evansville IN 47716-5165(812) 477-1542
The Turner Corp.Thomas C. Leppert, Chairman901 Main St. #4900Dallas TX 75202(214) 915-9600
Turner Industries Group LLCRoland Turner, Chairman8687 United Plaza Blvd.Baton Rouge LA 70809(225) 922-5050
Tutor-Saliba Corp.Ronald N. Tutor, President15901 Olden St.Sylmar CA 91342(818) 362-8391
UUlliman Schutte Construction LLCHerbert T. Schutte, President9900 Springboro Pk.Miamisburg OH 45342(937) 910-9900
URSMartin M. Koffel, CEO600 Montgomery St., 26 Fl.San Francisco CA 94111-2728(415) 774-2700
VValleyCrest Cos.Burton S. Sperber, Founder24151 Ventura Blvd.Calabasas CA 91302(818) 223-8500
James R. Vannoy & SonsConstruction Co.William E. Vannoy, PresidentP.O. Box 635Jefferson NC 28640(336) 846-7191
VCCSam K. Alley, CEO216 Louisiana St.Little Rock AR 72201(501) 376-0017
Vecellio Group Inc.Leo Vecellio Jr., Chairman101 Sansbury’s WayWest Palm Beach FL 33411(561) 793-2102
VECO Corp.Bill Allen, CEO949 E. 36 Ave. #500Anchorage AK 99508(907) 762-1505
Venture Construction Co.E. Ray Morris, President5660 Peachtree Industrial Blvd.Norcross GA 30071(770) 441-6555
VRH Construction Corp.Victor D. Wortmann Sr., Chairman320 Grand Ave.Englewood NJ 07631(201) 871-4422
WWalbridge AldingerJohn Rakolta Jr., Chairman613 Abbott St.Detroit MI 48226(313) 963-8000
The Walsh GroupRobert S. Walsh, President2905 SW First St.Portland OR 97201(503) 222-4375
The Walsh Group Ltd.Matthew Walsh, Chairman929 W. AdamsChicago IL 60607(312) 563-5400
Walton Construction Co. LLCJohn Martin, President3252 Roanoke Rd.Kansas City MO 64111(816) 753-2121
T.N. Ward Co.David E. Panichi, ChairmanP.O. Box 191129 Coulter Ave.Ardmore PA 19003(610) 649-0400
Washington Group InternationalStephen G. Hanks, PresidentP.O. Box 73Boise ID 83729(208) 386-5000
Webcor BuildersAndrew J. Ball, President 951 Mariner’s Island Blvd., 7 Fl.San Mateo CA 94404(650) 349-2727
Fred Weber Inc.Thomas P. Dunne Sr., Chairman2320 Creve Coeur Mill Rd.Maryland Heights MO 63043(314) 344-0070
Weeks Marine Inc.Richard N. Weeks, President4 Commerce Dr.Cranford NJ 07016(908) 272-4010
Weis Builders Inc.Jay Weis, CEO7645 Lyndale Ave. SouthMinneapolis MN 55423(612) 243-5000
The Weitz Co. LLCGlenn H. De Stigter, Chairman400 Locust St. #300Des Moines IA 50309(515) 698-4260
ENR
enr.com October 2006 � ENR SOURCEBOOK � 97
Top 400 DirectoryWELBRO Building Corp.Gary E. Brown, CEO2301 Maitland Center Pkwy. #250Maitland FL 32751(407) 475-0800
Wespac Construction Inc.R. John Largay Jr., President9440 N. 26 St.Phoenix AZ 85028(602) 956-1323
Weston Solutions Inc.Patrick G. McCann, President1400 Weston WayWest Chester PA 19380(610) 701-3000
Wharton-Smith Inc.Ronald F. Davoli, President750 CR 15, P.O. Box 471028Lake Monroe FL 32747-1028(407) 321-8410
J.F. White Contracting Co.Peter T. White, President10 Burr St.Framingham MA 01701(508) 879-4700
J.J. White Inc.James J. White IV, President5500 Bingham St.Philadelphia PA 19120(215) 722-1000
White-Spunner Construction Inc.John White-Spunner, CEO2654 Cameron St.Mobile AL 36607(251) 471-5189
The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co.Willard Hackerman, President300 E. Joppa Rd.Baltimore MD 21286(410) 821-1100
F.A. Wilhelm Construction Co. Inc.Philip G. Kenney, President3914 Prospect St., P.O. Box 516Indianapolis IN 46206-0516(317) 359-5411
Williams Brothers Construction Co.James D. Pitcock Jr., ChairmanP.O. Box 66428Houston TX 77266(713) 522-9821
Williams Co.Bruce E. Williams, Chairman2301 Silver Star Rd.Orlando FL 32804(407) 295-2530
S.M. Wilson & Co.Scott J. Wilson, President2185 Hampton Ave.St. Louis MO 63139(314) 645-9595
Winter Park Construction Co.Tracy S. Forrest, President221 Circle Dr.Maitland FL 32751(407) 644-8923
D.L. Withers ConstructionDaniel L. Withers, President3220 E. Harbor Dr.Phoenix AZ 85034(602) 438-9500
WorleyParsons Corp.William Hall, CEO5 Greenway PlazaHouston TX 77046(713) 407-5000
Worth Construction Co. Inc.Joseph Pontoriero, President24 Taylor Ave.Bethel CT 06801(203) 797-8788
Howard S. Wright Construction Co.Brad Nydahl, CEO
501 Eastlake Ave. E. #100Seattle WA 98109(206) 447-7654
Gary C. Wyatt General ContractorGary C. Wyatt, President4527 Southlake Pkwy.Birmingham AL 35244(205) 985-0121
YThe Yates Cos. Inc.William G. Yates Jr., President P.O. Box 385Philadelphia MS 39350(601) 656-5411
ZZachry Construction Corp.John B. Zachry, CEO527 Logwood Ave.San Antonio TX 78221(210) 475-8000
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ENR Top Lists – 2006Top 500 Design Firms – April 24
Top 400 Contractors – May 22
Top 100 Construction Management For Fee, Top 100 Construction Management-at-Risk, Top 100 Design-Build Firms, Top 40 Program Management Firms – June 12
Top 200 Environmental Engineering Firms – July 3
Top 200 International Design Firms – July 24
Top 225 International Contractors – August 21/28
Top 600 Specialty Contractors – October 16
ENR Sourcebooks – 2006Top 500 Design Firms Sourcebook – June 26Top 400 Contractors Sourcebook – September 18Top Owners Sourcebook – November 13Global Construction Sourcebook – December 18
ENR Top Lists – 2005Top 500 (U.S.) Design Firms – April 18Top 400 (U.S.) Contractors – May 16Top 100 Construction Managers, Design-Builders, &
Program Managers – June 13Top 200 Environmental Engineering Firms – July 4Top 200 International Design Firms – July 25Top 225 International Contractors – August 22/29Top 600 Specialty Contractors – October 17
ENR SOURCEBOOKS – 2005Top 500 Design Firms Sourcebook – June 20Top 400 Contractors Sourcebook – September 19Top Owners Sourcebook – November 142005 Global Construction Sourcebook – December 12
ENR Top Lists – 2004Top 500 (U.S.) Design Firms – April 19Top 400 (U.S.) Contractors – May 17Top 100 Construction Managers, Design-Builders, &
Program Managers – June 14Top 200 Environmental Engineering Firms – July 5Top 200 International Design Firms – July 26Top 225 International Contractors – August 23Top 600 Specialty Contractors – October 18
ENR SOURCEBOOKS – 2004Top 500 Design Firms Sourcebook – June 28Top 400 Contractors Sourcebook – September 27Top Owners Sourcebook – November 82004 Global Construction Sourcebook – December 2004Construction Facts – December 2004
ENR Top Lists – 2003Top 500 Design Firms – April 21Top 400 Contractors – May 19Top 100 Construction Managers, Design-Builders, &
Program Managers – June 16Top 200 Environmental Engineering Firms – June 2Top 200 International Design Firms – July 28Top 225 International Contractors – August 25Top 600 Specialty Contractors – October 20
ENR SOURCEBOOKS – 2003Top 500 Design Firms Sourcebook – June 2003Top 400 Contractors Sourcebook – September 2003Top Owners Sourcebook – November 10Construction Facts – November 20032003 Global Construction Sourcebook – January 5, 2004
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