It’s no secret that the pandemic and the rise of remote work fundamentally altered the demand for office space. What will that empty space look like going forward?
What’s Old Is New: Adaptive Reuse Across America
A courthouse in New Orleans. An office building in Washington, D.C. A newspaper headquarters in Chicago. All three are enjoying new lives after being transformed by adaptive-reuse projects—part of a growing trend that might offer a solution to the nation’s housing shortage.
Great Expectations: Is Your 2024 What You Thought It Would Be?
From interest rates slowing to AI implementation to lagging effects from 2022 and an impending election, can your construction company keep up with what 2024 has in store?
Plan of Steel: Raleigh’s Newest Adaptive-Reuse Project
Transforming a nearly century-old industrial site in Raleigh, North Carolina, into a high-end mixed-use development wasn’t anything new for Brasfield & Gorrie. But that doesn’t mean the project was without challenges, including lead remediation, structural issues and—of course—the supply chain.
Here Comes the Sun
Photovoltaic glass has never been used to help power a residential high-rise with solar energy. That’s changing with a new, 70-story building in Miami’s financial district.
What’s Old Is New
A sustainability retrofit is extending the useful life of a 50-year-old rental complex by slashing its energy consumption and boosting its energy resiliency.
Everything Is Rent
Today’s rental market is just as hot as the housing market was in summer 2020.
What Contractors and Architects Should Know About Post-Pandemic Renter Preferences
Here are the trends identified as most important by the majority of renter respondents to a recent survey.









