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Return to Virginia Business - October 2004

Construction

Virginia's top construction projects

Related story:
- Tourism gives construction a boost

Virginia Business
October 2004

Each year Virginia Business publishes a list of the state’s largest construction projects based on dollar value. We combine the largest projects from the year’s new construction report — ones that have actually broken ground — with large ongoing projects still under construction that have appeared on previous lists. To make room for new developments, we dropped a couple of long-term highway projects.

Woodrow Wilson Bridge
Virginia and Maryland: $2.5 billion.
Virginia is picking up the tab for $1 billion, while Maryland and the District of Columbia carry the rest of the cost. Originally built in 1961 to carry 75,000 vehicles a day, the bridge now supports more than twice that number. Two side-by-side drawbridges will ultimately divide the flow, and upgrades to four interchanges will ease traffic congestion. Various contractors.


Springfield Interchange
Fairfax County: $755 million.
Smoothing out the accident-heavy Mixing Bowl, where more than 400,000 vehicles a day pass through the juncture of Interstates 495, 395 and 95, the project is more than halfway finished. Slated for completion in 2007, the eight-year, seven-phase project is on schedule.
Lead contractors: Shirley Contracting Corp. and Lane Construction.


The Riverfront
Suffolk: $545 million.
Developers recently added 130 acres to this community on the Nansemond River for a total of 550-acres, with 1,200 residences (half in condos), an 18-hole golf course, swim club, and club house. Banks and office space will be built on the new acreage, with completion scheduled for the end of 2006 or mid-2007. Various contractors.


Pentagon Operation Phoenix
Arlington: $526 million.
Work continues on the rebuilding of the Pentagon, which suffered 2 million square feet of damage during the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Currently crews are working on wedge two. Over the next ten years, wedges three, four and five will be rebuilt. General contractor: Hensel Phelps Construction Co.


The Town Center of Virginia Beach
Virginia Beach: $400 million.
Three years into construction of this 17-block mixed-use project in the middle of Virginia Beach’s emerging business district, the Town Center’s Hilton Garden Inn is open for business, joining an office tower and parking garage completed last year. When finished in 2006, the center will include multi-level retail, residential, office space, a performing arts center, hotels and restaurants. Current construction includes a residential high-rise, the Town Center Square, and more retail.


New Port
Portsmouth: $300-$400 million.
Construction began in early fall on 1,628 houses, town homes and condos on approximately 200 acres south of I-264 near Victory Blvd. A community center and some retail and office space are also planned.
General contractor: Chesapeake Homes


City Center at Oyster Point
Newport News: $300 million.
With plans for one million square feet of office space, not to mention a quarter-million square feet of retail and entertainment, 600 residences, and an eight-acre park, this 52-acre mixed-use development is expected to be a comprehensive downtown district for Newport News. Initial infrastructure and the first parking garage are complete. Both five-story office buildings are open and occupied. Although residential components are still under construction, some were expected to be ready for occupancy by this month. Phases II and III, which include residential units, parking, conference center and additional retail space, are underway. The Center is expected to be complete by 2009. Various contractors.


Riverside Regional Medical Center
Newport News: $246 million.
Originally a $114 million renovation, this project has turned into a 320,000 square-foot expansion which will include a new parking garage, more patient rooms, a day surgery unit, new critical care units and a new mother/baby unit. The hospital opened its new $17 million emergency/trauma center on June 1. By summer’s end, the project was 25 percent complete, with a projected opening date in 2007.
General contractors: WM Jordan/McCarthy


Va. Route 288
Metro Richmond: $236 million.
With completion imminent, this road will connect southeastern Chesterfield County with Goochland County, southwest of the city. A key portion of the project, which includes the bridge over the James River, opened in August, leaving just one more stretch of the 17.5-mile extension left to complete.
General contractor: APAC-Virginia Inc.


Virginia Beach Convention Center
Virginia Beach: $202 million.
Phase I, which encompasses approximately one-half of the center, was 60 percent complete by the end of July. Set to open in 2007, the center will include a 150,000-square-foot exhibition hall, a 31,000-square-foot ballroom and more than 2,000 free parking spaces.
Construction manager: Turner Construction


Virginia Capitol Square renovation
Richmond: $190 million.
Construction and renovations began this summer on three of the four buildings slated for overhaul by 2007. Complete interior and exterior renovations on the Old Finance Building are underway, including a 50,000-square-foot addition. The steps of the Capitol, as well as several trees, have been removed to begin digging a 27,000-square-foot extension under the south lawn, which will house a visitors’ center, gift shop, multi-purpose rooms and exhibit and museum space.
Primary general contractor:
Gilbane/Christman


Westminster Canterbury expansion
Richmond: $153 million.
Current phase: $93 million. This multiphase project, now more than half complete, will ultimately include independent and assisted living facilities, as well as houses, and a 320-seat performing arts theater. By the end of the year, the project’s new memory support unit will be completed. Next year, residents will be moving into new condominiums on the property.
General contractor: W.M. Jordan Co.


Route 460 Bypass
New River Valley: $150 million.
This joint effort by the Virginia Department of Transportation, Virginia Tech’s Transportation Institute and the Federal Highway Commission is nearly complete. The result of the collaboration will be a bypass that connects I-81 with Blacksburg and a test facility for innovations like VDOT’s intelligent transportation systems.
General contractors: Vecellio & Grogan Inc/PCL Civil Constructors Inc.


Christopher Newport University
Newport News: $140 million.
CNU is finishing phase I of a comprehensive project that will add a new library, more student housing, a student center, and a performing arts center designed by I.M. Pei.
General contractor: W.M. Jordan


John Paul Jones Arena
University of Virginia
Charlottesville: $129 million.
This summer cast-in-place concrete structures for the parking garage and arena facility were set, cranes are in place and construction is beginning for the new 15,000-seat arena to replace 20-year-old University Hall as the future home of the Cavalier basketball programs. Parking will accommodate 1,500 vehicles. Amenities in the new facility include 20 luxury suites.
General contractor: Barton Mallow


The Power Plant at Hampton Roads
Hampton: $129 million.
According to a 1999 project report, as well as the developer’s Web site, the Power Plant at West Mercury Boulevard and Interstate 64 should have been up and running a year ago. While things haven’t moved as quickly as hoped, the newly opened Bass Pro Shops of Hampton hold down more than 100,000 square feet of retail space, with room to do hands-on product demos. Various contractors.


Hampton Roads Convention Center
Hampton: $106 million.
Near the Power Plant, the new convention center is wrapping up for a March 2005 finish. Finishing touches on the 344,00-square-foot center include interior waterfalls, an entrance with a Teflon canopy (like Denver Airport’s), and granite-faced fountains indoors and out.
General contractor: W.M. Jordan


Riverside on the James
Richmond: $86 million.
The foundation is finished and walls are going up on this mixed-use complex on the site of a former power facility that sat abandoned for more than 50 years. Riverside is scheduled for completion next spring, with 120 residential units, 800 parking spaces, and 76,000 square feet of retail/entertainment space.
General contractor: Brasfield and Gorrie


St. Francis Medical Center
Chesterfield: $75 million.
Floors are up and rooms outlined on the six-story, 130-bed acute care hospital scheduled to open next year. Surgeries are already scheduled in the new medical office building, which opens this month. Foundation and structure of the new emergency department are complete. Work is underway on the chapel. Meanwhile, construction continues on other components of the 40-acre campus including 150,000 square feet of doctors’ office space, an ambulatory care center and a birthing center.
General contractor: Whiting-Turner


Southwest Virginia Regional Jail System
Abingdon, Duffield, Haysi: $70 million.
Scheduled for completion next year, walls are up on all three sites, and roofs are in the works for this multi-jurisdictional jail system, which upgrades and expands three existing local jails serving nine localities. Various contractors.

Return to Virginia Business - October 2004


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