Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
R. H. White was founded in 1853 as a peddler by Ralph Huntington White on the railroad between Chester and Pittsfield. Originally on Winter Street in 1862, it moved in 1876 to a large ornate six-floor building (designed by Peabody and Stearns and built by McNeil Brothers) at 518–536 Washington Street, in the downtown shopping area.
J. F. White Contracting Co. is a Massachusetts-based contracting company specializing in heavy civil construction, deep foundations, pile driving, and mechanical/electrical construction. Founded in 1924, the company is headquartered in Framingham, Massachusetts. The company has performed work primarily in the New England area of America. In ...
Focusing on water and sewer piping, the company started its first major project in 1933 installing dewatering pumps in Boston’s Sumner Tunnel.
A 40-year-old man died Friday morning after falling four stories at a construction site in Jersey City, officials say. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) is investigating the ...
It is now ranked 26th on the list of tallest buildings in Jersey City. Jersey City Urby broke ground on January 15, 2014, with joint venture partner Ironstate Development Company to consist of 3 towers of 69 stories each containing 763 apartments, or 2,359 apartments in total. The first tower, Urby Harborside 1, was topped off in September 2015.
It is located along the banks of the since-filled Morris Canal in the Lafayette Section of Jersey City, New Jersey. [ 1 ] The older buildings were originally constructed in 1860 as part of the Passaic Zinc Works, with the later buildings constructed by Whitlock Cordage in and after 1905 on a seven-acre site. [ 2 ]
One Journal Square is a skyscraper complex under construction at Journal Square in Jersey City, New Jersey. It is the fourth tallest building by structural height in Jersey City, construction began in 2022 after significant delays. The first tower topped-out in 2024, while the second tower is under construction, with the entire project ...
Efforts to stabilize the powerhouse from further deterioration began in July 2009 and continued through 2010. In 2011, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey agreed to transfer its 55% ownership of the building to its co-owner, Jersey City, in exchange for a nearby lot where they would build an underground electric sub-station. [5]