by Burke Construction Group | Feb 12, 2019
This 28,500 square foot project consisted of converting a warehouse space into an FDA and Nevada Health Department certified food processing facility that produces Aloha Shoyu’s world famous teriyaki and soy sauces. Improvements consisted of the installation of a gas boiler, trench drains, high-pressure distribution lines, electrical and gas distribution systems. A 10,000 square foot “clean room,” unistrut ceiling structure and full epoxy flooring were also installed.
by Burke Construction Group | Jan 30, 2019
The Legacy Traditional School is a two story, 90,050 square foot nonprofit, A-rated charter school located in the Cadence community of Henderson, Nevada. Legacy is built on the principle to build good citizens and lifelong learners by expanding back to basic curriculum. The new facility includes 41 classrooms, state of the art culinary kitchen, piano classroom with headsets to improve learning and retention, indoor artificial turf field, indoor basketball court, two playgrounds and shade structures. The design of the school consists of a concrete masonry unit (CMU) as well as wood framing with brick and stucco facades that will have contrasting colors with wainscoting.
by Burke Construction Group | Jan 30, 2019
The North Las Vegas Legacy Traditional School is a two story, 80,717 square foot charter school and was the first campus in Nevada. This facility will be a prototype design that will be used on multiple sites throughout Southern Nevada. The campus includes an indoor gym, multi-purpose room, library, kitchen, classrooms and administrative offices. The design of the school consists of a concrete masonry unit (CMU) and wood framing with brick and stucco facades that will have contrasting colors with wainscoting.
by Burke Construction Group | Jan 30, 2019
This project was for the U.S. Fish & Wildlife at the Desert National Wildlife Refuge and consisted of a renovation of the contact station to a visitor station. This facility is a LEED Platinum rated facility and serves as a regional destination and major access point to the 1.5 million acre range. Key sustainable features include water-efficient fixtures, high-performance glazing, and HVAC systems that reduce energy costs, extensive daylighting and low VOC materials. The concrete tilt-up structure features unique touches in the public spaces such as replicas of fossils indigenous to the area cast into the walls and floor patterns that map the flow of spring run-off streams on the site.
2014 Spotlight Award
Sustainable Impact
NAIOP – Southern Nevada
2015 US DOI
Environmental Achievement
US Department of Interior
LEED Platinum Certification