Fitting a Square Building

Like many older U.S. cities, our nation’s capital infrastructure dates back to the early 1800s and their storm and wastewater treatment system is no longer able to accommodate heavy rain events, causing overflows of untreated waste into nearby rivers and streams. Architus’s work was recently featured in Point of Beginning magazine that explains how our use of virtual construction and geospatial technologies are allowing us to place two 160-foot-tall industrial facilities and related equipment underground into tunnel termination shafts to modernize the city’s storm and wastewater infrastructure and effectively reduce overflows.

Biggest Super Structures Made of Steel

Going back to an ancient history, on a small scale, steel was produced since early antiquity. But while some archaeologists discovered proofs of steel making dating from 2000 BC, it was the industrial revolution of the 17th century when the first modern…

San Diego Airport’s Terminals F & E

This new project of ours is poised to become one of the most complex structural steel construction endeavors that we’ve ever ventured into… While we’ve been involved in one airport-related project priorly, this construction of not 1, but 2 new terminals for…

Which Steel is Used for Oil Drills?

While a big part of our clients in Texas come from the oil-drilling industry, we’ve got a pretty wide expertise in everything in and around this field. Fabricating drills for oil wells is just one example of what kind of work we did… And speaking from our experience…