This annual edition includes market analysis and rankings of the largest U.S.-based general contractors in the eight major industry sectors listed below. This Sourcebook also provides editorial overviews and rankings of Top Contractors in almost fifty project types, such as healthcare, highways and pharmaceuticals. This edition contains a Directory of Contractors: company name, name of each firm's chief executive, and the firm's address and telephone number. This annual edition includes market analysis and rankings of the largest U.S.-based general contractors in the eight major industry sectors listed below. This Sourcebook also provides editorial overviews and rankings of Top Contractors in almost fifty project types, such as healthcare, highways and pharmaceuticals. This edition contains the name of each firm's chief executive and the firm's address and telephone number. Tables The Top 400 Contractors, Main Rankings, General Building: General Building; Entertainment; Retail; Health Care; Commercial Offices; Multi-Unit Residential; Education; Government Offices; Distribution and Warehouses; Correctional Facilities; Religious & Cultural; Sports, Hotels, Motels, and Convention Centers; Transportation: Transportation; Marine & Port Facilities; Bridges; Highways: Mass Transit and Rail; Airports; Manufacturing/Industrial Process: Manufacturing; Semiconductors; Auto Plants; Electronic Assembly; Aerospace; Industrial Process; Pharmaceutical Plants; Chemicals; Pulp and Paper Mills; Steel and Nonferrous Metal Plants; Food Processing; Petroleum: Petroleum; Pipelines; Offshore and Underwater Facilities; Refineries and Petrochemical Plants; Maintenance; Power: Power, Cogeneration; Nuclear Plants; Fossil Fuel; Transmission and Distribution; Operations and Maintenance; Environmental: Water Supply; Dams and Reservoirs; Water Treatment and Desalination; Transmission Lines and Aqueducts; Sewerage and Solid Waste; Wastewater Treatment; Solid Waste; Sanitary and Storm Sewers; Hazardous Waste; Nuclear Waste; Chemical and Soil Retention; Telecommunications: Telecommunications; Data Centers and Web hotels; Towers and Antennae; Transmission Lines and Cables Article Headlines - Firms Optimistic Despite Still Sluggish Market - All Eyes Are Focused on Washington As Industry Awaits TEA-21 Successor: States try new project delivery methods to fill federal funding gap - Automotive Plants Are the Bright Light In the Dimming Manufacturing Sector: Government regulation, energy costs blamed for sluggish activity - Domestic Oil and Gas Industry Future Is Caught in Polarizing Policy Debate: Higher prices at the pump are not spurring many capital projects - Contractors Feel Pain of Overbuilding Despite Growth in Electricity Demand: State and federal regulations generate pollution control work - New Growth and Old Infrastructure Drive Water-Wastewater Upgrades: Development and regulation also push cleanup of tainted sites - New Needs and Technologies Are Set To Make Up for Niche's Past Doldrums: Projects ong delayed by lack of investment start to re-emerge |