Construction Design & Engineering

Member news: ASM congratulates The Marr Companies on 120 years of success!

Boston, MA In 1898, Daniel Marr arrived in America with his son John Marr ready to make a home for themselves and start a new venture.T...

Eckman Construction wins ABC NH/VT award for National Guard project

Pembroke, NH The Associated Builders and Contractors NH/VT Chapter honored Eckman Construction with an Excellence in Construction Award in t...

Senate Const. awarded design/build for Mass Crane and Hoist

Tyngsborough, MA Senate Construction Corp., has been awarded the design/build contract to construct a 50,000 s/f mixed-use, office, and manu...

DivcoWest breaks ground on 45 acre project

Cambridge, MA DivcoWest joined mayor Denise Simmons, city manager Lou DePasquale and elected officials from the Commonwealth of Massach...

Richards of Tighe & Bond appointed to hazardous waste site cleanup board

Westfield, MA Governor Charlie Baker has appointed Tighe & Bond’s Marc Richards, P.E., LSP to the Commonwealth’s B...

Laser scanning, how our WBE speeds up construction - by Laureen Poulakis

How do we speed up construction?  Are there innovative tools to assist us with accuracy while maintaining integrity of the built environment?  For years, contractors and design teams have sought ways to shorten timelines and increase precision. 

BOND celebrates opening of SMAST at UMass Dartmouth

New Bedford, MA BOND celebrated the opening of the new University of Mass. Dartmouth School for Marine Science and Technology (SMAST). ...

O’Brien named CEO of BSC Cos.

Boston, MA Sean O’Brien, PE, has been named chief executive officer of BSC Companies, Inc. O’Brien succeeds current CEO David Ha...

Coghlin Mailman of Coghlin Electrical named president of Associated Subcontractors of Mass.

Boston, MA At its recent biennial dinner gala & elections, the Associated Subcontractors of Massachusetts, Inc. (ASM) elected new office...

The urban appeal: Sneaker companies making way to city - by Matthew Guarracino

For years, the thriving Massachusetts athletic footwear industry – led by Reebok, New Balance, and Converse – favored traditional headquarters, surrounded on the outside by parking lots and dominated on the inside by 20th century décor, closed-door offices, cubicles and the like.