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Today's Real Estate News
  • Homebuyer tax credit off the radar
  • Economic genie is out of wishes
  • Control your online destiny
  • Fannie cracks the foreclosure whip
  • Finding what clicks in real estate
  • Agents and their tech thingies
  • CEO of Sacramento brokerage on leave
  • Pending real estate sales inch up in July
  • Mortage rates still seeking a bottom
  • 5 ways to stay positive in a down market
  • Communities get 'First Look' at many REOs
  • California forgoes new foreclosure law
  • Roost unveils new business model
  • Nominate real estate's 'Most Influential'
  • Remembering Laurie Manny
Construction.com:  Latest Headlines
Construction.com: Latest Headlines
  • Chicago Plans $4B Urban Village
  • Stantec to Acquire San Francisco's Anshen + Allen Architecture Firm
  • Expanding Horizons: Analyzing the Balfour Beatty/Parsons Brinckerhoff deal
  • Virginia Tech Student Wins Yéle Haiti Competition
  • Reviving a Modest Masterpiece: The Trenton Bath House
  • Fatalities Down, But Rate Stays Flat
  • NY Approves New Neighbor for Empire State Building
  • Diller Scofidio + Renfro to Design Broad Museum
  • A Golden Anniversary for a Philip Johnson Museum
  • Fluor, United Rentals Form Jobsite Logistics Partnership
  • Load-Pier Test at St. Louis Bridge Sets World Record
  • Reuse or Build New? Group to Gather Hard Environmental Data
  • California Cools Off Capitol Complex With Thermal-Energy Tank
  • Fed Probe Leads to Wolff’s Likely Exit From Berger
  • All Systems Go for Vinoly’s $1.5B Domino Project in Brooklyn
  • U.S. Wind Power Surge Likely To Continue, Say Scientists
  • Lack of State Budget Affects $3 Billion in Projects, Caltrans Says
  • Agency Unveils 30-Year Plan for Developing Chicago Area
  • Caterpillar Compiles Short List of GCs for $426M Winston-Salem Plant
  • Plans Unveiled to Expand Terminal 4 at JFK Airport
  • July Construction Rebounds 7%
  • Gutsy Builder Took A 'Quantum Leap' for Crane Safety
  • Louis Kahn Synagogue Expansion Stirs Controversy
  • Facebook Adds Expansion to Massive Data Center Under Construction
  • U.S. Presses Case Against Berger Group Over Alleged Overbilling
  • EPA Toolkit to Remove Red Tape for Green Projects
  • Acquitted Rigger Wants His Licenses Back
  • Rafael Viñoly's Design of Kennedy Institute Unveiled
  • Fighting Fines for Fatal Blast, Contractor Cites Safety Record
  • Preservationist Named Head of SCAD’s Architecture School
  • Turner Regains Army Contract After Court Reverses GAO Ruling
  • June Construction Slips 3%
  • Deal Sends Tishman Construction Into AECOM’s Arms
  • Finally, BP Advances Effort To Stop Leak
  • U.S. Architecture Schools Announce Leadership Changes
  • Virginia’s I-495 Expansion Fast-Tracked Thanks to D-B, Infusion of Private Capital
  • Interview with Alain de Botton, Architecture of Happiness Author
  • Naval Station Great Lakes Completes $770-Million Construction Program
  • LBJ Freeway Financing Secured, Project to Start by Early 2011
  • Engineer Rejects N.Y. State's 'Sling Theory' in Rigger Trial
  • Communication Breakdown Lifts Price of Tacoma Ramp
  • Groundbreaking for First TIGER Project
  • Construction Industry Loses 22,000 Jobs in June
  • Manslaughter Trial Begins For New York Rigger
  • $1.4-Billion South Texas Powerplant Both Praised and Damned
  • Speedy Runway Paving Job Means $5 Million Bonus
  • University Of Alabama Debuts Disaster Response Study Track
  • Affordable Housing Goes Green in the Bronx
  • EPA to Modify Regulations on Sewer Overflows
  • May Construction Grows 3%
  • Special Report: Gulf Oil Spill
  • Piano Conceives a Respectful Addition to Kahn's Kimbell Masterpiece
  • Kinks in Supply Chain Produce Road Paint Shortage
  • Finalists for 2010 Aga Khan Award Announced
  • NYC Skyscraper Is First U.S. Commercial Tower to Earn LEED Platinum
  • 2010 Hurricane Season Will Be "Active to Extremely Active," Scientists Predict
  • White House Picks Architect to Head Preservation Board
  • Did BP Skip Approval for Platform Engineering Design?
  • Stern's Museum for African Art Set to Open in 2011
  • Nuns Celebrate LEED Platinum Certification
  • OSHA Recognizes NCCER Program To Certify Crane Operators
  • An Experimental Early Work by Renzo Piano Threatened
  • USGBC Says Feds Can Do More for Green Building
  • Debate Over Radioactive Waste in Texas Gets Hot
  • April Construction Falls 9%
  • ENR Names the Top 400 Contractors
  • Gulf Oil Spill: Industry Waits for Cleanup Call
  • AIA Announces 18 Winners of 2010 Housing Awards
  • Seven Teams Picked For $4 Bil in Guam Milcon Work
  • Caltrans Realizes Big Savings in Construction Costs Due to Economic Downturn
  • Clinic Made of Freight Containers Heads to Haiti
  • Profile Rises for Small Projects as Construction Market Tightens
  • Corps Speeds Up Permitting For Gulf Coast Cleanup
  • Integrated-Project-Delivery Boosters Ignore Many Flashing Red Lights
  • Green Design-Build Model Crafted for Buildings To Achieve Net-Zero Energy Use
  • Feds Seek Energy-Efficient Building Projects
  • U.S. DOT Seeks Changes in Disadvantaged-Business Rules
  • EPA Stiffens Coal-Ash Rules, But Proposal Allows Recycling
  • Nashville Begins to Assess Damage From Epic Flooding
  • Interior Dept. OK's Nation's First Offshore Wind Project
  • AIA's Effort to Eliminate Retainage Fee Pays Off
  • USGBC Launches LEED-Neighborhood Development
  • Worker Killed as Crane Boom Collapses
  • Haiti's Plan Includes New Ports, Highways
  • Archives of WTC-Architect Yamasaki Saved from Destruction
  • Chinese Drywall Remediation Standard Already Evolving
  • ENR Reveals the Top 500 Design Firms
  • AIA's Committee on the Environment Announces Annual Awards
  • Tour of U.S. Embassy in Haiti Shows Small Measures Paid Off Big Time
  • Controversial Plans by Viñoly for Domino Sugar Plant Now on View
  • Construction Groups Sue NY DOT Over Pay Freeze
  • AGC Study Finds No Scientific Reason for Calif. Emission Rule
  • John Carl Warnecke, "Kennedy's Architect," Dies
  • March Construction Holds Steady
  • Southern California Quake Damaged Treatment and Storage Infrastructure
  • While Dubai Stumbles, Abu Dhabi Marches On
  • Next Round of Federal Regulations Has Suppliers Retooling Clean Diesel
  • Green-Infused Modular Classroom Targets 'Grid-Neutral' Status in School Construction
  • Last Piece of L.A. Live Opens – Ritz-Carlton, Los Angeles
  • NYC Unveils Sweeping Redevelopment Plan for Governors Island
  • Florida Tribe Wins Ruling To Resume Everglades Construction
  • Concrete Industry Fears Ruling May Stir Litigation Over Fly Ash
  • Steven Holl on a Winning Streak
  • Celebrated Architect Stirs Debate With Haiti Prefab House Idea
  • Obama Signs Jobs Bill, With Highway-Transit Extension
  • "Villa Libeskind" Takes Prefab to the Extreme
  • Green Standard Efforts Merge
  • February Construction Rises 5%
  • AIA Announces 2010 Young Architect Award Winners
  • Testwell CEO Tried To Kill Himself After Conviction
  • Mayor Unveils Stimulus Plan in San Francisco
  • January Construction Retreats 1%
  • New Construction Starts in December Climb 5%; Annual Total for 2009 Drops 26% to $412 Billion
  • Dubai Stands Tall as Skyscraper Debuts
  • National Mall Plan Option Incorporates LEED
  • Cintra-Led Team to Begin $2B North Texas Road Project
  • November Construction Falls 9%
  • October Construction Jumps 12%
  • September Construction Slides 7%
  • AIA Study: 2008 Billings Topped $44 Billion
  • Housing Could Spark A Rebound in 2010
  • Leaky Libeskind Roof to Be Fixed at Last
  • SOM Loses Top Architect to HOK
  • Faulty Tower's Implosion Presents Many Challenges
  • Who's To Blame for Faulty Foster Tower?
  • Balfour Beatty to Pay $626 Million For Parsons Brinckerhoff
  • Heinz Awards Highlight Environmental Leaders
  • August Construction Rises 2%
  • June Construction Retreats 7%
  • The Top 250 Architecture Firms
  • Gehry Trims Staff As Projects Hit Snags
  • F&S Partners in Dallas Merges with SmithGroup
  • May Construction Climbs 7%
  • Brad Pitt Selects More Architects for "Make It Right" Project
  • HUD and DOT Coordinating Efforts
  • Nation's Largest New Public Transportation Project Moving Into Construction Phase
  • Architects Plan Breathtaking New Skydeck for Sears Tower
  • April Construction Slips 1%
  • Peter Zumthor Wins 2009 Pritzker Prize
  • Big Problems Continue With Drywall Made in China
  • Top 10 Green Projects Named by AIA
  • March Construction Improves 5 Percent
  • February Construction Falls 8%
  • Building in Cologne, Germany Collapses
  • AIA Announces the Names of 112 New Fellows
  • Federal Eco-Labeling Law Taking Shape
  • Spanish-Led Consortium to Build $4-Billion Texas Freeway Project
  • Architectural Billings Index Hits All-Time Low
  • Gottfried House Earns Highest LEED for Homes Score to Date
  • Healthcare Market Not Immune to Economic Malaise
  • Virtual Design and Construction Users Seeking Better Collaborative Tools
  • January Construction Slips 3%
  • New Construction Starts in December Retreat 5%; Annual Total for 2008 Slides 15% to $543 Billion
  • Herzog & de Meuron Designs HQ for Major Bank in Spain
  • Obama Delivers Promise to Unions By Reversing Bush Labor Pact Ban
  • The Economic-Stimulus Bill, Sector-by-Sector Analysis
  • What Does Stimulus Plan Mean for A/E/C Industry?
  • AIA Announces 2009 Honor Awards for Architecture
  • USGBC Members Approve LEED 2009 Revisions
  • Zaha Hadid Chosen to Design Vienna Library
  • Louisiana Gets $1.5-Billion Loan From Feds for Hurricane-Protection System
  • 'Less Restrictive' No-Damages-for-Delay Clause Still Vulnerable
  • Layoffs Sweep Architecture Profession as Economy Worsens
  • Obama's Education-Upgrade Pledge Could Mean Lots of School-Construction Work
  • Prosecutor Charges Safety Manager, Two Others in Fatal N.Y. Construction Fire
  • Shanghai Skyscraper Named "Best Tall Building"
  • Chicago Takes the Lead in Green Hotels
  • Madrid's City of Justice Starts to Take Shape
  • Report: Concrete Outperforms Steel as Bridge Material
  • Florida's Highway Wish List Totals Nearly $7 Billion
  • For Architects, the Job Axe Starts to Fall
  • Despite Sinking Economy, Work Begins on Super-Tall Shanghai Tower
  • States Seek $136 Billion for Infrastructure In New Stimulus Package
  • Students Design-Build LEED Platinum Art Center for Tornado Ravaged Town
  • Is the Dubai Bubble Starting to Burst?
  • Overwhelming Public Response Extends Crane Rule Comment Period
  • OSHA Releases Fatality Numbers
  • U.S. Green Building Council Pushes Obama to Act on Green Promises
  • Renzo Piano’s Design for Kimbell Museum Revealed
  • Architects Hit Hard by Financial Crisis
  • Lawsuit Possible Over Cracks At $146-Million Tampa Project
  • Michigan Building First to Earn Double LEED Platinum Certification
  • Garage Collapse Contractor Points Finger at Engineer
  • Shopping Malls Not Below Libeskind's "Dignity"
  • After 30 Years, EPA Sets Tougher Airborne Lead Standard
  • AIA To Release New IPD and Design-Build Documents
  • With Financial Rescue Signed, Contractors Hope for a Revival
  • Architect Calls for Sustainability "Nutrition" Labels
  • House for War Veteran Designed by Yale Students
  • Gehry Designs First Big Project For Toronto, His Hometown
  • Deal to Privatize Midway May Pay for Chicago Projects
  • Gilbane Builds $156 Million Discovery Tower in Downtown Houston
  • September's Financial Market Turmoil
  • August Construction Retreats 3%
  • Citing Dire Trust Fund Picture, USDOT Calls for $8-Billion Infusion
  • Olympic Village Takes LEED Gold
  • Yale Taps Stern for Major Project
  • HOK's Sports Design Unit Set To Split From Its Parent Firm
  • Department of Energy Focuses on Net-Zero Commercial Buildings
  • AIA and USGBC To Form a Strategic Alliance
  • Tishman Manager Pleads Guilty to Embezzling $2.8 Million
  • Studio Pei-Zhu Tapped for Museum for Iconic Chinese Artist
  • Cities Mandate LEED But Not Certification
  • Jerusalem's Signature Span
  • Robert A.M. Stern Handily Wins 10th Annual Vincent Scully Prize
  • Bentley and Autodesk Agree To Exchange Keys To Sharing of Data
  • London Revs Up Construction for 2012 Summer Olympics
  • World's Second-Longest Ocean Crossing Opens
  • Midwest Floods Wreak Havoc on Architectural Landmarks
  • Nation's First LEED Platinum Affordable Housing Built in Massachusetts
  • NYC Crane Inspector Pleads Not Guilty
  • Adaptive Reuse
  • Build Local, Price Global
  • Record reveals: Beijing
  • Downturn in Chicago's Downtown
  • May Construction Holds Steady
  • Gehry Designs NYC's Tallest Residential Tower
  • NRC Considering 15 Nuke Plant Apps
  • California Pumps $271 Million Into Construction of Stem Cell Labs
  • USGBC to Outsource LEED Certification
  • Tight WTC Schedule Unveiled
  • AIA Requires Sustainability in Continuing Education
  • Gehry Downsizes Tower Design for Atlantic Yards
  • Work Begins on London's Olympic Stadium
  • National Trust Announces 11 Most Endangered Sites
  • Contractors Subject to New Lead Paint Regulations
  • Construction Starts for Houston CBD's First LEED Gold Building
  • Penn Announces New Architecture Dean
  • AIA Announces 2008 COTE Award Winners
  • $1-Billion Jigsaw Puzzle Has Builder Modeling Supply Chains
  • Federal 2009 Budget a Mixed Bag for Green Building
  • BIM Companies Acquiring Energy Modeling Capabilities
  • Study of Fees Indicates Project Type Doesn’t Matter
  • Cement Consumption To Grow 43% by 2030
  • March Construction Slides 8%
  • Jean Nouvel Wins 2008 Pritzker Prize
  • Architects' Billings Down Sharply in Early 2008
  • L.A. Mayor Moves to Speed Building Project Approvals
  • Young Carpenter a Victim of Miami Crane Accident
  • The Sagaponac Effect: Modernist Subdivisions Multiply
  • McCarthy Starts $115M GSU Research Laboratory
  • February Construction Rises 2%
  • With the Architect of the Capitol Slot Still Open, AIA Urges Action
  • Stern Will Design Bush Library at SMU
  • House Clears $17.6 Billion in Renewable-Energy Tax Breaks
  • Atlantic City Planning $20 Billion in Projects
  • High Perceived Cost of Green Persists, Says Survey
  • Engineering Firm Plans Tower Twice as Tall as Burj Dubai
  • January Construction Jumps 8%
  • The Economy and Construction: Review of Recent Indicators, February 2008
  • Nouvel Designs Towering Slender Neighbor for MoMA
  • Glasgow Officials Close Bridge After Cable Connector Snaps
  • RK Stewart Leaving Gensler for Perkins + Will
  • Suncor Expansion to Stretch Labor Force
  • Kansas Town Rebuilding as the Greenest in America
  • AIA Names Recipients of 2008 Young Architects Award
  • Green Buildings Boast High Occupancy Rates
  • December Construction Unchanged from Prior Month; Annual Construction Start Total for 2007 Slides 11%
  • AIA Names Winners of 2008 Honor Awards
  • Safety Board Finds I-35W Bridge Plates Too Thin
  • Zaha Hadid to Design MSU's Broad Art Museum
  • Materials Innovators Engage Cradle to Cradle Protocol
  • Crane Mishap Kills One at Trump Site
  • Ettore Sottsass, Elder Statesman of Italian Design, Dead at 90
  • Richard Meier's Atheneum Wins AIA's 25-Year Award
  • North America's Largest PV Powerplant in Service
  • Chipperfield Unveils St. Louis Museum Wing
  • New Orleans Waterfront Plan Takes Shape
  • CH2M Hill Founder Burke Hayes Dies at 95
  • Oscar Niemeyer Designs New Arts Center in Spain
  • New Gensler Office Earns LEED-Silver Certification
  • USGBC to Revamp LEED Rating System
  • Most A/E/C Spending Measures Pass on Election Day
  • Clinton: Sustainability “Most Important” Cause Today
  • I.M. Pei Designs $30,000/Night Suite for Four Seasons NYC
  • I-35W Replacement Set to Start Pile Driving
  • HOK Sport’s Design for the London 2012 Olympic Stadium Unveiled
  • Conferees Hike Road Funds, Add $1 Billion for Bridges
  • David Adjaye's MCA/Denver Opens
  • LEED-for-Homes to Launch at Greenbuild
  • AIA Forms Running Far Ahead of Rivals
  • Utah Embraces Accelerated Construction Method
  • Lifecycle Building Challenge Winners Announced
  • Construction Slide Could Continue in 2008
  • 21 Chicago Landmarks Honored for Preservation
Home Inspection - Google News
Home Inspection - Google News
  • Inspection came as no surprise to nursing home - Chicago Tribune
  • How to Become a Home Inspector Free Information Available from Accurate ... - PR Web (press release)
  • Ins and outs of home inspection - Deseret News
  • New York State Home Inspection Council to Meet - ReadMedia (press release)
  • Causes for housing checks when living on a military base - Helium
  • Home presentation vital in sale - Sunshine Coast Daily
  • Former MSU star's strange alleged scam - ESPN (blog)
  • Home inspection firm opens - Bradenton Herald
  • He's on firm footing for a lawsuit - Philadelphia Inquirer
  • Mistakes To Avoid When You Are Buying A House - Stock Markets Review
Construction - Google News
Construction - Google News
  • Settlers defy Netanyahu with vow to begin construction - MiamiHerald.com
  • Construction Spending in US Fell Twice as Much as Forecast - BusinessWeek
  • UK construction orders slump 14% - The Guardian
  • UK house prices fall, construction growth cools - Reuters
  • Construction Jobless Rate Improves Slightly in August - Engineering News Record (subscription)
  • Private Nonresidential Construction Spending Higher in July - ForConstructionPros.com
  • NCDOT to halt most construction work for Labor Day weekend - Bizjournals.com
  • Construction Unemployment Rate Rises as Spending Declines - Rental Equipment Register (registration)
  • Whitetail Border Crossing Construction Still on Ice - Flathead Beacon
  • Construction work on hold for Labor Day - KFVS
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