Technology Sector Case Study: Flatiron

1020 Words5 Pages

Group 3
Walker
Engineering B
1 November 2015
Technology Sector Report Over the course of two hundred plus years, human ingenuity has resulted in the development and creation of some of the most useful feats of engineering the world has seen. One of these allows humans to cross vast bodies of water, while also not blocking the path of incoming ships and larger vessels. The creation of a drawbridge allows this to be possible; having been created since medieval times, and is still in use today. Modern technology has evolved the use of drawbridges to standard uses of engineering technology today. Once crossing bodies of water was considered difficult, and even deadly, but a drawbridge makes this seem so simple today. The first widespread use …show more content…

This company was founded in 1947 and is “named after the unique rock formations found near Boulder, Colorado” (Flatiron). Flatiron was originally intended to be a materials company, but was soon recognized for its building along several highways in Colorado. The company now has “more than 2,500 employees and has completed projects in every region of the United States” (Flatiron). In 2013, Flatiron built the final portion of the Bay Bridge that spans from San Francisco to Oakland. Flatiron’s first civil construction project started in 1987, in Colorado. In 2013, Engineering News Record ranked Flatiron’s bridges number six in the nation …show more content…

These engineers “work closely with [company and business] owners to address constructability and feasibility issues before design work even begins and again during design and construction” (Flatiron). In the state of California, “Flatiron is the lead design-build contractor for the Presidio Parkway, more than $250 million design-build project to replace the aging approach to the Golden Gate Bridge” which was completed in 2013 (Flatiron). With all of these civil responsibilities, the Flatiron company has risen in the nation as one of the top bridge-building and civil construction companies. Flatiron currently has six divisions across the United States that manage and control all the civil and infrastructural projects that it oversees. Flatiron also has markets in the airport, highway, oil and gas, power generation, and rail industries. This company continues to grow as the demand for more buildings and infrastructure continues to exponentially ascend with the ever-rising number of people and goods in the world we live in today.