 |
Small Works Division
McBride sweats the small stuff too...
A truck hits a grocery store… A bathtub overflows…A space heater burns a bedroom… A tree falls on a roof…A sprinkler head pops... A circuit overloads… A thousand times a year, wherever, whenever we're needed, McBride employees are there swiftly and safely. |
|
 |
Inn at Seventh Mountain
Luxury resort residence units
Two fires in two years to two different buildings. And a lesson in fast-track reconstruction. Repairs in the first building took one year to complete using conventional construction processes. McBride completed the second, identical building in 17 weeks, saving several hundred thousand dollars in lost income. |
|
 |
Lamb Weston, Inc
Large-scale food processing plant
A fire burns over 45,000 square feet of a five-acre potato processing plant. Production losses are running to millions of pounds per day. Rebuiding requirements include concrete tilt-up, steel trusses, special coatings and massive electrical. Speed and coordination are a must. And it better work right when it's done. |
|
 |
Delson Lumber
Cedar-siding Mill
Fast-track reconstruction for one of the largest cedar-siding producers in the Pacific Northwest, with design-build on the fly. Specialized equipment, so zero tolerance for errors and no time to waste. |
|
 |
Chignik Pride
80-man bunkhouse, kitchen, dining room and warehouse for fish processing operation
A remote cannery - in the Aleutian Islands - has a major fire in the middle of winter. The salmon season starts in 20 weeks. The Business Interruption losses could run in the millions if the project isn't ready when the fish are. The entire construction job - bunkhouse, kitchen, warehouse - completed on time and on budget. |
|
 |
The Cedars
Restaurant
The only upscale restaurant in Kennewick. A six-month fast-track job in mid-winter on an exposed post-and-beam structure -- high-end carpentry on an island in the middle of the Columbia River. |
|
 |
Polson Building
Commercial Office Building
A fire-damaged building, 100,000 square feet -- major seismic upgrades, a metal skeleton inside a historic brick skin -- in the Pioneer Square District, so historic guidelines were an ever-present companion. |
|