Английская Википедия:Ellerbe Becket
Ellerbe Becket was an independent Minneapolis, Minnesota-based architectural, engineering, interior design and construction firm until 2009, when it was acquired by AECOM.[1]
The firm currently employs 475 people in seven locations and three countries, and has designed buildings in all of the 50 states and in 20 countries.Шаблон:Citation needed
History
The company originally called Ellerbe & Co. was founded by Franklin Ellerbe in 1909 in St. Paul, Minnesota. Its first clients included the Mayo Clinic and 3M. Thomas Ellerbe took over the company in 1921 upon his father's death. When he retired in 1966 it became an employee-owned company. In 1988 it merged with Welton Becket and Associates of Los Angeles and became Ellerbe Becket.[2] In 1988 it opened a sports design division in Kansas City. On October 26, 2009, Ellerbe Becket joined the architecture, planning, and engineering firm AECOM.
Projects
General buildings
- Ronald Reagan Building, Washington, DC
- Carlson School of Management - University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN
- Kingdom Centre, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
- Target Plaza South and North, Minneapolis, MN
- Science Museum of Minnesota St. Paul, MN
- Brasil Telecom Data Center, Brasilia, Brazil
- Charles Evans Whittaker Federal Courthouse, Kansas City, MO
- Hesburgh Library, 1963
- O'Shaughnessy Hall (1953), North Dining Hall (1957), Keenan Hall and Stanford Hall (1957), Stepan Center (1962), Lewis Hall (1965), Galvin Life Science (1967), Grace and Flanner Halls (1969), Fitzpatrick Hall of Engineering (1974), Snite Museum of Art (1980), Pasquerilla West (1980), Pasquerilla East (1981), Stepan Chemistry Hall (1982), Decio Faculty Hall (1984), Siegfried Hall (1988), Knott Hall (1988), Pasquerilla Center (1990), Ricci Band Building (1990), Hesburgh Center for International Studies (1991), DeBartolo Hall (1992), Mendoza College of Business (1996), O'Neill Hall (1996), Keough Hall (1996), McGlinn Hall (1997), Welsh Family Hall (1997) at the University of Notre Dame
Health care
- Yonsei University Medical Center - Severance Hospital, Seoul, Korea
- Khalifa Sport City - Orthopedic Sports Medicine Hospital, Doha, Qatar This is now Aspetar
- Walt Disney Memorial Cancer Institute, Orlando, FL
- Mercy Medical Center, Baltimore, MD
- Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN
- Sanford Health, Sioux Falls, SD
- St. Luke's Hospital Nassif Heart Center, Cedar Rapids, IA
- St. Rita's Medical Center, Lima, OH
- Stonewall Jackson Hospital, Lexington, VA
- Gonda Building, Rochester, MN
- Regions Hospital (2009 expansion & cafeteria renovation), St. Paul, MN
- Mercy Clinic and Hospital (expansion 1950s), Oskaloosa, Iowa
Sports facilities
The following were designed by the Kansas City Sports Venue branch
Stadiums
- Notre Dame Stadium (and renovation), Notre Dame, IN
- Lumen Field, Seattle, WA
- Centennial Olympic Stadium/Turner Field (now Georgia State Stadium), Atlanta, GA
- Faurot Field (renovation), Columbia, MO[3]
- Guangdong Olympic Stadium, Guangzhou, China
- Lambeau Field (renovation), Green Bay, WI
- Rentschler Field, East Hartford, CT
- Rhodes Stadium, Elon, NC
- Chase Field, Phoenix, AZ
- Autzen Stadium (renovation), Eugene, OR
- S.B. Ballard Stadium (formerly Foreman Field), (renovation), Norfolk, VA
- Sam Boyd Stadium (renovation), Las Vegas, NV
- Johnny Unitas Stadium (renovation), Towson, MD
- Innovative Field, (formerly Frontier Field), Rochester, NY
Arenas
- Frost Bank Center (formerly SBC Center and AT&T Center), San Antonio, TX
- Barclays Center, Brooklyn, NY
- Amerant Bank Arena (formerly Office Depot Center, BB&T Center, National Car Rental Center, BankAtlantic Center, and FLA Live Arena), Sunrise, FL
- Amica Mutual Pavilion (formerly Dunkin' Donuts Center and Providence Civic Center), Providence, RI
- FedExForum, Memphis, TN
- Gainbridge Fieldhouse, (formerly Conseco Fieldhouse and Bankers Life Fieldhouse), Indianapolis, IN
- Great Southern Bank Arena, (formerly JQH Arena), Springfield, MO
- John Paul Jones Arena, Charlottesville, VA
- Joyce Center, (formerly Athletic & Convocation Center), Notre Dame, IN
- KeyBank Center, (formerly First Niagara Center,) Buffalo, NY
- Rudolf Weber-Arena, (formerly Arena Oberhausen and König-Pilsener-Arena), Oberhausen, Germany
- Madison Square Garden, New York City, New York (1990s renovation)
- Manchester Arena (formerly Manchester Evening News Arena), Manchester, England
- Matthew Knight Arena, Eugene, OR
- Moda Center, Portland, OR
- Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse (formerly Gund Arena and Quicken Loans Arena), Cleveland, OH
- Saitama Super Arena, Saitama, Japan
- Enterprise Center (formerly Scottrade Center), St. Louis, MO
- Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena, Spokane, WA
- T-Mobile Center, (formerly) Sprint Center, Kansas City, MO
- Amalie Arena, Tampa, FL
- Vibrant Arena at The MARK, (formerly) The MARK of the Quad Cities, i Wireless Center, and TaxSlayer Center), Moline, Illinois
- Footprint Center (formerly Talking Stick Resort Arena, America West Arena, and US Airways Center), Phoenix, AZ
- TD Garden (formerly FleetCenter), Boston, MA
- Thomas & Mack Center, Paradise, NV
- Capital One Arena (formerly MCI Center and Verizon Center), Washington, DC
- Wells Fargo Center, Philadelphia, PA
- XFINITY Center (formerly Comcast Center), College Park, MD
References
External links
- Английская Википедия
- Страницы с неработающими файловыми ссылками
- Defunct architecture firms based in Minnesota
- Design companies established in 1909
- 1909 establishments in Minnesota
- Defunct companies based in Minneapolis
- 2009 mergers and acquisitions
- Страницы, где используется шаблон "Навигационная таблица/Телепорт"
- Страницы с телепортом
- Википедия
- Статья из Википедии
- Статья из Английской Википедии