Lynnwood Link rising along Interstate 5 - Railway Track and Structures rtands.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from rtands.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Thu June 10, 2021 - Southeast Edition #12
Eric Olson - CEG CONTRIBUTING EDITOR
Cody Byrd (L), install supervisor of Ideal Landscaping, and Bob Hendrick of SITECH Precision in Raleigh.
One thing is certain about
Ideal Landscaping s project at Hoover Road Park in Durham, N.C.: The Triangle company employs some of the best tools on the market to perform its grading project at the 50-acre soccer park.
The 30-year-old commercial landscape contracting firm is based in nearby Holly Springs, southwest of Raleigh.
Currently, Ideal Landscaping is working in Durham to install irrigation systems underneath four soccer fields. The family-owned landscaper is a subcontractor to Skanska USA, along with Raleigh-based Fred Smith Construction, the provider of the project s subgrade. Skanska is the prime contractor for the $9.5 million upgrade to the park with the goal of making it a tournament level facility.
Fully funded, Florida Poly’s new research building moves full steam ahead
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The Applied Research Center (ARC) at Florida Polytechnic University has received full funding to complete its construction by next spring. The building is designed to become a research hub for Central Florida and the state.
New rendering shows a multi-use room inside the Applied Research Center, a research facility being built at Florida Polytechnic University.
“Providing the funding to complete construction of the ARC will allow Florida Poly to be even more important in building our high-tech economy and attracting STEM companies to our county and state.”
Florida Polytechnic research center gets state funding - Tampa Bay Business Journal bizjournals.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bizjournals.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Diverse spaces are key to returning urban cores to normal
While many things can be done from the office or from home, neither is ideal for every type of work.
By CHARLIE FOUSHEE
Foushee
For more than a year, we have seen plenty of news stories questioning whether there is still a need for office space. The line separating work from home has blurred and COVID-19 has only catapulted that trend. While commute times certainly have improved, many aspects of work-life balance have not.
But just like Mark Twain, who is often quoted as saying “the reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated,” so, too, is the purported demise of the downtown core.