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UT Regents Endorse
Unprecedented $2.56 Billion Plan
The University of Texas System's
board of regents recently endorsed an investment of $2.56
billion consisting of 22 capital construction projects for
FY 2007 and 22 others approved since August 2005.
Investment
to Boost UT Science, Engineering, Technology
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| One of 44 capital
construction projects approved by the UT regents since
August 2005 to bolster the university's science, technology,
engineering and health infrastructure. |
The University of Texas System board of regents endorsed
an investment of $2.56 billion in early August to boost competitiveness
in key scientific areas.
Regents approved 22 capital construction projects valued
at more than $1.5 billion for the 2007 fiscal year. The projects
are in addition to 22 others approved by the regents since
August 2005 totaling $954.4 million.
The capital projects are focused on providing the UT System
academic and health institutions with state-of-the-art equipment,
facilities and start-up packages designed to recruit top research
scientists and faculty. Examples of new investments include
$27 million for a new math, science and engineering teaching-learning
facility at UT Dallas; $80.4 million for a new engineering
research building at UT Arlington; and $150 million for a
new 200,000-sq.-ft. South Texas Research Facility at the UT
Health Science Center in San Antonio.
The investment is the largest single financial commitment
in UT System's history. Funding will come from a variety of
sources.
The UT System initiative follows several national studies
and calls for action to address the country's decline in producing
scientists and engineers and erosion of U.S. global competitiveness.
Of the total $2.56 billion, $2.48 billion is designated for
44 science, technology, engineering and health-related capital
projects. The investment includes $76.8 million for faculty
recruitment and smaller equipment, as well as repair and renovation
projects in the current and next fiscal years.
Jacobs
Joint Venture Selected for ID/IQ Contract to Support Fort
Bliss
Jacobs Engineering Group Inc. recently announced that a subsidiary
company, in a joint venture with Huitt-Zollars, received an
indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity contract from the
Fort Worth District, U.S. Corps of Engineers, to provide multidiscipline
design and other professional services primarily supporting
the Fort Bliss Modular Force (Army Transformation) Program
in El Paso.
The contract is for a one-year base period, followed by four
one-year renewal option periods. The maximum cumulative contract
value is $75 million.
The Jacobs/Huitt-Zollars Joint Venture is providing land
development engineering including site development, site design,
site integration and management and oversight services with
a focus on coordinating the horizontal infrastructure with
vertical construction activities required to accommodate the
deployment of multiple new brigade combat teams at Fort Bliss.
HKS Merges With Stein-Cox Group, Nelsen
Acquires Team Haas
HKS Architects Inc. of Dallas recently merged with The Stein-Cox
Group, a Phoenix, Ariz.-based health-care design firm. HKS
says the merger will allow the firm to leverage its specialty
health-care design experience nationally. The new office also
provides opportunity for expansion into other Arizona market
sectors including commercial, hospitality and sports.
The Stein-Cox Group is a 20-person practice, founded by Mo
Stein and Jeff Cox in 1987. Since its inception, the firm
has completed more than $2 billion in construction throughout
Arizona.
In another recent design-firm merger, Austin-based Nelsen
Architects has acquired Team Haas, the Austin design firm
involved in the design of Austin's new Joe R. and Teresa Lozano
Long Performing Arts Center, a multi-venue facility.
Nova Contracts With Mueller for Equipment
for Biodiesel Refineries
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| Inside the first
biodiesel fuel plant built by Nova. |
Nova Energy Holding Inc. of Houston recently signed purchase
orders with Mueller Field Operations Inc., a subsidiary of
the Paul Mueller Co. of Springfield, Mo., for the procurement
and fabrication of stainless-steel equipment for three planned
Nova refineries. The planned refineries will each be capable
producing 60 million gallons of biodiesel on an annual basis.
"The stainless-steel market is currently tight,"
said Kenneth Hern, chairman and CEO of Nova. "By placing
a purchase order now for the equipment for three facilities,
we are locking up our supply of stainless steel and can avoid
costly construction delays so that we can complete construction
and commence producing biodiesel sooner than expected."
Fluor Awarded New Two-Year Disaster Assistance
Contract By FEMA
Irving-based Fluor Corp. recently announced that its Government
Group was awarded a two-year contract by FEMA. The Individual
Assistance Technical Assistance Contract, or IA-TAC, will
be for program and Disaster Recovery Center support, temporary
housing group site design and construction and for the hauling
and installing of temporary housing units for future disasters
anywhere in the United States and its territories.
The contract, which was part of a multi-month, open-procurement
process, went into effect on August 1. It has a contract ceiling
of $250 million.
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