New school features bright, daylit spaces designed and built through careful collaboration.
The city’s 700-room hotel complex will offer 60,000 sq ft of meeting space and include a junior ballroom, restaurants and a rooftop pool.
Robson Arena brings new sports and entertainment era to campus while boosting its neighborhood and downtown connections.
The team expanding city’s bus rapid transit line overcomes scope changes, concrete shortages, COVID disruptions to stay on track.
Innovative geothermal field will help the university achieve its long-term goal of achieving 100% clean electricity by 2030.
First-time joint venture contracting team led thousands of workers in early completion of $4.1-billion worth of work.
The Thornton Water Treatment Plant was designed to replace an existing plant constructed in 1955 that was near the end of its useful life.
Castle Rock has developed a water supply system that can use renewable sources to meet the town’s growing demand. Burns & McDonnell developed a unique drinking water plant that treats both groundwater and surface water sources and helps the town add advanced treatment systems to the plant.
The 10-story 11th & Idaho tower was constructed with a focus on sustainable work environments, materials and design.
This 32,000-sq-ft renovation and nearly 100,000-sq-ft expansion of a community center transformed a dated facility into a contemporary fitness center.
The key feature of the aquarium’s new Science Learning Campus is its Ecosystem Exploration Craft & Observatory, or EECO, which repurposes a 190-ton, 165-ft-tall metal sculpture that originally served as U2’s stage during the band’s 360-degree tour.
This new welcome center is also the new home for the university’s outdoor recreation program and highlights its commitment to outdoor adventure and education.
The remodel of this design firm’s space is among the first in Utah to be certified by the Living Building Institute.
This 149-room Courtyard by Marriott, located at the foot of Utah’s Big Cottonwood and Little Cottonwood canyons, offers easy access to downtown and the area’s major ski resorts and fills a gap in hospitality offerings in the area.
This year’s contest includes an emphasis on green projects with a new award called Excellence in Sustainability.
The South Suburban Parks and Recreation District has provided recreational opportunities for nearly 160,000 residents in six cities and towns throughout Arapahoe, Douglas and Jefferson counties for nearly 40 years.
Few projects have the power to impact an entire city; however, Weidner Field not only serves as the permanent home for the Colorado Springs Switchbacks Soccer Club but also is designed to help reinvigorate the city’s core.
The Goldener Hirsch Inn is a European-style mountain lodge originally built more than 25 years ago that offers luxury accommodations for visitors to Deer Valley Resort.
This new corporate headquarters and asphalt batch plant brings operations and administrative functions together in a workplace that showcases an industrial architecture aesthetic.
Every bullet, grenade, artillery shell and explosive used at Fort Carson will pass through new blast-proof facilities designed to contain live ammunition.
Denver’s Lower Downtown has been transformed by the new mixed-use development McGregor Square.
The U.S. 36 Mile Point 8 project near Estes Park rerouted the Little Thompson River from alongside the highway back to its original alignment passing under U.S. 36 through Muggins Gulch.
This expansion and renovation of an existing cold storage warehouse and office building originally built in 2015 added nearly 150,000 sq ft of freezer space and a 24,000-sq-ft cold dock.
The Springs Rescue Mission provides food, shelter, clothing and services to the Colorado Springs homeless population.
The 860,000-sq-ft McGregor Square project is a vibrant mixed-use development in Denver adjacent to Coors Field, the home of the Colorado Rockies baseball team.
This nine-story core-and-shell office tower is the tallest building in West Valley City and includes a solar array as one of its defining architectural features.
As the gateway to Snowmass Base Village, the 165,000-sq-ft One Snowmass complex near Aspen sets the tone for what visitors can expect from their experience in the village and beyond.
This 350,000-sq-ft corporate headquarters consolidates operations for up to 2,000 employees that used to take place in a variety of spaces.
This renovation converted an existing warehouse into a food processing and manufacturing plant for oat-based milk foods.
Just when it seemed Denver’s Cherry Creek North shopping and business district had reached the height of swank, along comes the Clayton Members Club and Hotel.