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Slip, trip, and fall incidents on construction sites are often described as “common” accidents. But in the construction industry, there is nothing routine about them. These events frequently occur in
At first glance, trenchless construction sounds simple. Install utilities underground with minimal surface disruption. Fewer open trenches. Less traffic impact. Faster completion. But anyone who has spent time around horizontal
In civil, heavy, and underground construction, numbers tell the story. Linear feet of trench. Cubic yards of excavation. Conduit runs. Duct banks. Vaults. Restoration quantities. When those numbers are right,
On any active job site, personal protective equipment is often the most visible sign of a company’s safety culture. Hard hats, high-visibility vests, safety glasses, respirators, gloves, and fall protection
In construction litigation, timing and strategy can influence the outcome just as much as the facts themselves. One of the most common questions attorneys and claims professionals ask is this:
On almost every construction project, the general contractor sits at the center of activity. They coordinate crews, manage schedules, oversee safety, and keep the work moving. When everything goes smoothly,
Geotechnical engineering in construction deals with what many people never see but what ultimately controls whether a project succeeds or struggles: the ground. Soil, rock, and groundwater conditions influence how
Transportation-related incidents on construction projects are rarely simple. A dump truck backing into a worker, a delivery vehicle striking a temporary barrier, or a forklift incident inside a staging area
When construction projects go off track, conversations often shift quickly from progress and performance to one unavoidable question: where did the money go? Cost is usually the clearest and most
Construction defect disputes rarely start with a single, simple question. More often, they begin with frustration. Why is a building leaking when it is brand new? Why is a roadway