Chicago

Utopia Hill: From project engineer to director of project management

Utopia Hill: From project engineer to director of project management

As you travel alongside vast, open plains, and giant turbines spread as far as the eye can see, have you ever considered how those wind farms are constructed? For you built environment vets, my guess is probably yes. For this National Women in Construction Week feature, Alexis Chastain spoke with Utopia Hill, Director of Project Management, Procurement and Construction at Invenergy. 

Top 10 BuiltWorlds Videos of 2016

Top 10 BuiltWorlds Videos of 2016

In the last year, our original video series brought together the built environment’s most impactful firms and powerful thought leaders. As we wrap up 2016, we look back at the top 10 videos we produced.

Reconnecting cities with their waterfronts

Reconnecting cities with their waterfronts

In the past, when urban waterways were used as major avenues for industry, cities turned their back on them as polluted eyesores. We took a look at several cities that have reconstructed their waterfronts, changing how tourists, residents, and businesses experience them.

CA: Lucas strikes back with $1B museum plan

CA: Lucas strikes back with $1B museum plan

It's a MAD, MAD world. Another Star Wars sequel is due in theaters soon, but the off-screen soap opera behind the nomadic Lucas Museum of Narrative Art may finally be nearing a happy ending. Read on to see where George Lucas believes it will be built. 

Canstruction: AEC Rallies to Feed Hungry

Canstruction: AEC Rallies to Feed Hungry

How do companies like Gensler, Arup, and McShane Construction help fight hunger? By designing and building structures out of cans -- duh! While Canstruction is an international organization, BuiltWorlds reporter Alexis Chastain attended one of the regional events to find out more. 

High hurdles: Olympic Village another Rio fiasco

High hurdles: Olympic Village another Rio fiasco

The 2016 Summer Games start tonight in Rio de Janeiro. But for many of the athletes, their first trials came when they tried to move into an “uninhabitable” Olympic Village. At press time, workers are still trying to fix and finish the massive P3 project.

Reverse sprawl? Cities lure back suburban stars

Reverse sprawl? Cities lure back suburban stars

From Boston and Seattle to Chicago, San Diego, and points in between, the urban exodus that saw U.S. businesses and residents flee to suburbia in the latter half of the 20th century is now at and end. (Thanks, millennials!) John Gregerson reports.  

Global Forum To Harness Metropolitan Might

Global Forum To Harness Metropolitan Might

With global cities continuing to grow, the world has never seemed smaller. London, New York, Shanghai, Dubai, Tokyo, all are digital neighbors with extraordinary influence. Global thought leaders this week are in Chicago strategizing for the coming whirlwind.

Building Tomorrows, Cities, AGC Trade on Skills

Building Tomorrows, Cities, AGC Trade on Skills

As the national war for skilled labor heats up, industry groups like AGC are aggressively targeting the next generation. To fight gang recruitment with opportunity, Chicago in particular has launched a new initiative that offers job training to at-risk youth. 

Concrete, Canoes, Cramming and Caffeine (Part 2)

Concrete, Canoes, Cramming and Caffeine (Part 2)

Regional finals are just days away for the National Concrete Canoe Competition, sponsored by the American Society of Civil Engineers. In this second installment, we check in with our team at Illinois Tech for an update as the big race nears.

Multifamily High-Rise Boom Draws Crowd

Multifamily High-Rise Boom Draws Crowd

The Midwest's booming multifamily market will take center stage April 6 for a one-day real estate conference in Chicago. Last year, the city alone added 3,000 multifamily residential units, and another 5,000 are on tap for 2016. How long can this last?

Illinois Tech Adds Innovation Center to Iconic Campus

Illinois Tech Adds Innovation Center to Iconic Campus

Less may be more, as Mies van der Rohe famously said. But sometimes you still need more of it. That is the case this spring on the historic campus of Illinois Institute of Technology, where architect John Ronan is channeling the Modernist master.

Flint Debate Finds Fault, but Water Woes Rise Across U.S.

Flint Debate Finds Fault, but Water Woes Rise Across U.S.

Debating in Flint, candidates Hillary and Bernie attacked Michigan's wounded governor this week. But all of us know that the local problem with lead-contaminated drinking water is just part of a vastly broader crisis with the nation's water infrastructure.

Express Rail to O'Hare: Can P3 succeed where Others failed?

Express Rail to O'Hare: Can P3 succeed where Others failed?

High-speed rail to O'Hare International Airport? It's certainly been talked about before, but this week embattled Chicago Mayor Rahm Emmanuel has resurrected the idea as a potential public-private venture that may actually happen.

VOTE: Help My Students To 3D Print Public Housing Units

VOTE: Help My Students To 3D Print Public Housing Units

One Chicago high school teacher writes about his students' ongoing desire to change the world, one 3D-printed housing unit at a time. He also asks for help to keep his program going.

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