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Groundbreaking Held for $180 Million Cancer
Center in Chapel Hill
Local dignitaries, representatives of general contractor
Skanska USA Building and others held a groundbreaking ceremony
recently marking the beginning of construction of the new
North Carolina Cancer Center Hospital for the University of
North Carolina Hospitals.
The seven-story, 320,000-sq.-ft. clinical building is slated
to open in 2009, and will combine cancer treatment and research.
The project also includes a 105,000-sq.-ft. physician's office
building, which is scheduled to open in 2008. The total cost
of the project is reported as approximately $180 million.
Zimmer Gunsul Frasca Partnership of Seattla is the architect
of record.
The new cancer center will replace a 1950s-era tuberculosis
sanatorium where cancer patients currently receive treatment.
Residential Improves but Other Sectors
Fall in N.C., S.C.
Residential was the only category to show improvement in
September in both North Carolina and South Carolina, McGraw-Hill
Construction reported recently. Due entirely to that growth
in residential, however, compared to a year ago, the value
of new contracts for future construction activity improved
by about 2 percent in North Carolina and roughly 12 percent
in South Carolina.
In North Carolina, new September contracts totaled nearly
$1.7 billion, compared to last year's $1.6 billion. The biggest
sector, residential, improved by 16 percent compared to last
September and tallied roughly $1.3 billion. Meanwhile, the
value of nonresidential contracts fell by 24 percent to total
approximately $248 million. The value of nonbuilding contracts
fell by 44 percent and totaled just $97.7 million for the
month.
Year-to-date, North Carolina contract activity is 11 percent
ahead of the first nine months of 2004, with a total value
of approximately $17.8 billion. Nonresidential is 4 percent
ahead of last year's pace, with roughly $3.7 billion in new
contracts reported to date. The value of residential contract
activity has climbed by about 13 percent to total roughly
$12.2 billion. The nonbuilding sector is 11 percent ahead
for the year, with approximately $1.9 billion in new contracts
reported.
The trend was much the same in South Carolina, where September
experienced a 12 percent improvement that resulted in a $948.1
million total. Residential contracts increased by 41 percent
to total roughly $724.8 million, compared to last September's
$514.4 million. The nonresidential category fell by 12 percent
for a monthly total of roughly $163.7 million. The nonbuilding
sector declined by 58 percent, to tally approximately $59.6
million for the month, down from last year's $143.4 million
total.
Despite the strong residential numbers and the overall improvement
in September, year-to-date, the value of new contracts in
South Carolina, now estimated at about $9 billion, is still
1 percent behind last year's pace. Residential, estimated
at nearly $6.3 billion and with a 28-percent improvement so
far, is the only positive sector for 2005. The nonbuilding
category, with a roughly $886.9 million total, is an estimated
52 percent behind the first nine months of 2004, while nonresidential,
with a value of about $1.8 billion, is down by roughly 19
percent.
UNC-Charlotte Unveils New Motorsports Research
Lab
The University of North Carolina at Charlotte recently unveiled
its new Motorsports Engineering Research Lab. The 6,400-sq.-ft.
facility, built by Skanska USA Building, features classroom
and laboratory space where students in The William States
Lee College of Engineering's motorsports research discipline
can concentrate on projects ranging from technology testing
for race teams to research for the U.S. Department of Energy.
Roads and Bridges Names Knightdale Bypass
as Top Project
Roads and Bridges magazine, a publication covering the country's
transportation infrastructure, named Flatiron's recently completed
Knightdale Bypass one of the "Top 10 Roads and Bridges"
in the U.S.
The Roads and Bridges' editorial staff based their selection
on the size of the project and how it contributes to the nation's
overall transportation needs. The magazine recognized the
Knightdale Bypass among the ten best new road and bridge projects
for its sheer size and timely accommodation of increasing
traffic demands in the Raleigh, N.C., area.
"The Knightdale Bypass] is one of the largest jobs
in
the country, and it has met several challenges dealing with
scheduling, permit compliance, and traffic control. The Knightdale
Bypass defines what is a Top 10 Road," wrote the magazine's
editor, Bill Wilson.
The new bypass accommodates approximately 70 percent of U.S.
64 traffic in Knightdale, N.C. Flatiron Constructors opened
the 10-mi. design-build project to traffic about one month
early in July 2005.
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