Hardesty & Hanover

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hardesty_&_Hanover an entity of type: Thing

Hardesty & Hanover is an American infrastructure engineering company specializing in the design and management of bridges and other transportation and architecture projects. The firm was founded in 1887 by John Alexander Low Waddell, a structural engineer who pioneered the design of large-scale moveable bridge. Originally incorporated in Kansas City, Missouri as J.A.L. Waddell, Consulting Engineer, the company was renamed throughout the early 20th century as Waddell added junior partners to the organization. In 1920, the firm moved its headquarters to New York City, where it would go on to design many important bridges int the area, such as Newark Bay Bridge (rail), the original Goethals Bridge, and Marine Parkway Bridge. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Hardesty & Hanover
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xsd:integer 1101820678
rdf:langString
rdf:langString J.A.L. Waddell, Consulting Engineer
rdf:langString Waddell & Hardesty
rdf:langString Waddell & Harrington
rdf:langString Waddell & Hedrick
rdf:langString Waddell & Son
rdf:langString in Kansas City, Missouri
rdf:langString New York City
rdf:langString United States
rdf:langString Infrastructure engineering
rdf:langString CEO Sean A. Bluni, PE
rdf:langString Hardesty-Hanover_Logo.png
rdf:langString Planning
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Design & Engineering
rdf:langString Program Management
rdf:langString Privately held company
rdf:langString Hardesty & Hanover is an American infrastructure engineering company specializing in the design and management of bridges and other transportation and architecture projects. The firm was founded in 1887 by John Alexander Low Waddell, a structural engineer who pioneered the design of large-scale moveable bridge. Originally incorporated in Kansas City, Missouri as J.A.L. Waddell, Consulting Engineer, the company was renamed throughout the early 20th century as Waddell added junior partners to the organization. In 1920, the firm moved its headquarters to New York City, where it would go on to design many important bridges int the area, such as Newark Bay Bridge (rail), the original Goethals Bridge, and Marine Parkway Bridge. In recent decades the company has expanded its footprint to the fields of highway design and movable architecture, contributing to projects like U.S. Bank Stadium, the New York City Shed, the redevelopment of LaGuardia Airport, and other major interchanges of highways in New York City.
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rdf:langString J.A.L. Waddell, Consulting Engineer
rdf:langString Waddell & Hardesty
rdf:langString Waddell & Harrington
rdf:langString Waddell & Hedrick
rdf:langString Waddell & Son
xsd:gYear 1887

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