flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Swinerton wants a bite of the Big Apple

Contractors

Swinerton wants a bite of the Big Apple

The California-based construction firm opens an office in New York City that is positioned to become its Northeast hub.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | June 1, 2021
Swinerton moves into New York City with new branch

Swinerton will focus initially on serving existing customers and providing services for corporate interiors, aviation, and healthcare.

Over the past eight years, the general contractor Swinerton went through an up and down growth trajectory that was limited by where it operated and the products it focused on.

In 2018, the company—which dates back to 1888—came out with its March to 2030, a blueprint for future growth that emphasizes product and geographic diversity. Since that plan came to light, the firm has expanded into Texas, Atlanta, Charlotte, and Raleigh. And now, it is making its boldest move by opening its first office in New York City, which Swinerton envisions becoming its hub for the Northeast.

That’s a tall order, given that the company had virtually no presence in that part of the country outside of some work in New Jersey by its renewable energy group. But the COVID-19 pandemic created what Swinerton’s CEO Eric Foster calls “an opportunity in crisis.”

“We feel the need to answer the call to build back better and stronger in post-pandemic New York,” says David Callis, Swinerton’s president and COO.

Running the New York office is Andrew Pearl, a 14-year company veteran who grew up in northern New Jersey but had spent his entire career, until now, with Swinerton in San Diego and San Francisco. “I never intended to stay in California,” Pearl tells BD+C, and he’s been pushing the company to open a branch in New York practically since he joined the firm.

After the coronavirus hit, Swinerton’s executives approached Pearl in the spring of 2020 about accelerating the company’s growth plans for the Northeast. Swinerton officially opens its New York office today at 292 Madison Avenue with 10 fulltime employees.

HOMING IN ON EXISTING ACCOUNTS

Andrew Pearl, Swinerton's New York division manager

Andrew Pearl, Swinerton's New York division manager, has been urging his firm to expand into New York City for more than a decade. Image: Swinerton.

 

Pearl, whose title is Vice President and Division Manager, says that for the next 12 to 18 months, the New York office’s strategy is to serve the firm’s 75-plus accounts with which it has master agreements. These include technology companies, big banks, and insurance companies. Indeed, the first job the New York office booked is a “small” project for one of its tech clients.

“Many of these clients have been asking us to expand east to do work for them, and now we can finally say ‘yes,’” says Pearl. He adds that the types of projects Swinerton’s New York office is focusing on initially are corporate interiors, aviation, and healthcare/life sciences.

LEVERAGING DIFFERENTIATORS

The New York metro area is the largest and one of the most competitive commercial construction markets in the U.S. Prior to the pandemic, the value of commercial and multifamily starts in the area stood at $30.9 billion in 2019, according to Dodge Data & Analytics estimates.

To get the word out about its new office, Swinerton has hired a local P.R. agency, Cathy Callegari Public Relations, whose client list includes several other construction and engineering firms. Pearl is also in the process of joining a nonprofit that specializes in community building and neighborhood revitalization, and that Swinerton is part of in nine other cities.

And while Swinerton is the new kid on the block in New York, Pearl believes that this $5 billion company, with 20 offices in nine states, can leverage several “differentiators” when pitching new and existing customers. For example, earlier this year Swinerton launched its Timberlab brand for mass timber delivery and integration. Its renewable energy group is active in 28 states. It has a real estate redevelopment business, and a design-build collaboration called Perq with the engineering firm Walker Consultants.

Pearl says the company also has operations in Philadelphia and northern Virginia that now fall under the New York office umbrella.

Related Stories

| Feb 27, 2013

Bronx residents get LEED Platinum public housing complex, rooftop farm

The New York City Housing Authority has opened Arbor House, a 124-unit LEED Platinum complex in the Morrisania neighborhood of the Bronx.

| Feb 25, 2013

First look: Google's new HQ is engineered for creative collisions

The new California "Googleplex" will be engineered to make sure no Google employee will be more than a 2.5 minute walk away from any other.

| Feb 25, 2013

AISC seeks proposals for development of BIM best practices guide

The American Institute of Steel Construction seeks assistance from BIM users in identifying and documenting best practices to facilitate the long-term standardization of BIM in structural steel construction.

| Feb 25, 2013

Turner employs rare 'collapsible' steel truss system at Seattle light rail station

To speed construction of the $110 million Capitol Hill Station light-rail station in Seattle, general contractor Turner Construction will use an unusual temporary framing method for the project's underground spaces.

| Feb 22, 2013

Westlake Reed Leskosky will renovate training center for Cleveland Browns

Local firm Westlake Reed Leskosky has been chosen to design renovations to the Cleveland Browns' Training and Administrative Complex in Berea, Ohio.

| Feb 22, 2013

Dutch team's 'bioconcrete' can heal itself

Two researchers from Delft Technical University in Holland have developed a self-healing cement that can stop microcracks from forming in concrete.

| Feb 22, 2013

Defense department report: Green design saves taxpayers money

An independent report on energy efficiency and sustainability standards used by the Pentagon for military construction affirms the value of LEED-certified high performing buildings to America’s military and U.S. taxpayers.

| Feb 22, 2013

Zaha Hadid to help plan new London-area airport hub

The Mayor of London has appointed Zaha Hadid Architects to help create a major new airport in southeastern England.

| Feb 21, 2013

Female construction executives launch professional organization for women in construction operations

Sarah Creighton and Holly Cindell of McCarthy Building Companies, Inc. of Newport Beach are among a group of pioneering women from Southern California construction, architecture and engineering companies to begin WiOPS—a new professional organization geared specifically toward women in construction operations.

| Feb 21, 2013

BD+C's 2011 White Paper: Zero and Net-Zero Energy Buildings + Homes

We submit our eighth White Paper on Sustainability in the hope that it will inspire architects, engineers, contractors, building owners, developers, building product manufacturers, environmentalists, policymakers, government officials, corporate executives, officeholders, and the public to foster the development of net-zero energy buildings and homes.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021