Ammann & Whitney
Private | |
Industry | Structural Engineering |
Founded | 1946 |
Key people | Nick Ivanoff |
Number of employees | 250 |
Website |
Ammann & Whitney is a full-service architecture and engineering firm that provides design and construction services for public and private sector projects. The work of the firm includes new construction, renovations and adaptive reuse/historic preservation, interior design and sustainable design.
History
Ammann & Whitney was founded in 1946 by Othmar Ammann, a bridge designer, and Charles S. Whitney, a designer of innovative structures. Ammann & Whitney has since grown into an international firm. While working with a wide variety of projects including (steel, concrete, masonry and timber) bridges for vehicular, pedestrian and rail traffic, Ammann & Whitney focuses on long span suspension bridges. Examples of the firm's bridge work include the Delaware Memorial Bridge, Walt Whitman Bridge, the General Belgrano Bridge in Argentina, the Throgs Neck Bridge and most notably the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge.[1]
Ammann & Whitney currently has offices on the East Coast of the United States and its headquarters in New York City. There are branch offices in Boston, MA, Philadelphia, PA, Pittsburgh, PA, Richmond, VA, Miami, FL, and Washington, D.C..
Bridge and Highway Projects
New York City
- Bronx-Whitestone Bridge
- Throgs Neck Bridge
- Triborough Bridge
- Verrazano-Narrows Bridge
- Wards Island Bridge
- George Washington Bridge
- Williamsburg Bridge
Elsewhere
- Bear Mountain Bridge, upstate New York
- General Belgrano Bridge, Argentina
- Bridge of the Americas, Panama
- Delaware Memorial Bridge between Delaware and New Jersey
- Ben Franklin Bridge, Philadelphia
- Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco
- Thomas J. Hatem Memorial Bridge, northeastern Maryland
- Huguenot Bridge, Richmond, Virginia
- Mon/Fayette Expressway, Pittsburgh vicinity
- Roebling Suspension Bridge, between Cincinnati, Ohio, and Covington, Kentucky
- Royal Gorge Bridge, Colorado
- Tobin Bridge, Boston, Massachusetts
Buildings and Other Projects
These include:[2]
- Arecibo Radio Telescope, Puerto Rico
- Dulles International Airport Terminal Buildings
- TWA Terminal at JFK International Airport
- Kresge Auditorium
- Queens Museum of Art
- Metropolitan Opera House
References
- ↑ Ammann & Whitney Official Website
- ↑ "Ammann & Whitney". International Database for Civil and Structural Engineering.