Webcor Builders
For the maker of Webcor brand electronics, see Webster-Chicago.
Subsidiary | |
Genre | Commercial building contractor |
Founded | 1971 |
Founder |
Rosser B. Edwards David R. Boyd |
Headquarters |
207 King Street, Suite 300 San Francisco, California 94107 |
Key people |
Jes Pedersen, President/CEO Tony Rango, COO |
Number of employees | 911 (2014) |
Parent | Obayashi |
Website |
www |
Webcor Builders is a commercial construction contractor with headquarters in San Francisco, California. The firm also has regional offices in Alameda, Los Angeles, and San Diego, and is among the largest builders in California with clients including Starwood Lodging, Lucasfilm, Oracle Corporation, The California Academy of Sciences, eBay and Electronic Arts. It has been part of Obayashi since 2007.[1]
Notable projects
Webcor has built or is building many notable projects throughout California and has been featured on the Discovery Channel's Extreme Engineering series for the California Academy of Sciences replacement project in Golden Gate Park. The firm's portfolio includes:
- The SFMOMA Expansion
- The Century
- The W Hollywood Hotel & Residences
- The Hotel & Residences at L.A. Live
- The new San Francisco Transbay Terminal Phase I
- California Memorial Stadium seismic and program improvement project
- San Francisco General Hospital Rebuild Program
- Millennium Tower
- The Infinity
- W Hotel San Francisco
- St. Regis Museum Tower
- InterContinental Hotel San Francisco
- California Academy of Sciences
- Symantec campus in Culver City, California
- Cathedral of Christ the Light, Downtown Oakland
- Letterman Digital Arts Center at the Presidio of San Francisco
- Foundry Square
References
- ↑ J.K. Dineen (12 November 2006). "Webcor builds deal: $100M for company". San Francisco Business Times. Retrieved 28 July 2013.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, July 16, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.