New Residential Building B

IMEG provided structural, mechanical, electrical, plumbing, fire protection, and low-voltage technology engineering design services for Building B, a 285,000-sf residential building at Garvies Point in Long Island, NY. The LEED Silver five-story, 176-unit, apartment building includes rooftop gardens, lobby, loading, amenity spaces, and main level parking including utility rooms, stairs, and elevators. A landscaped terrace

Renovations and Upgrades

Rental Assistance Demonstration (RAD) is a component of NextGeneration NYCHA, the housing authority’s 10-year strategic plan to preserve public housing. A component of RAD is the rehabilitation, improvement, and modernization of public housing property and buildings. IMEG provided structural, mechanical, electrical, plumbing, and fire protection engineering design services for the renovation of approximately 1,315 apartment

Consolidation to New Office

LEED Gold IMEG provided mechanical, electrical, plumbing, and fire protection engineering design services for the pre-lease due diligence phase, and subsequent consolidation, of GroupM’s existing locations into a single 700,000-sf new facility at 3 World Trade Center. The new flexible environment has open, collaborative workbench clusters, private offices that can function as meeting/quiet rooms, large

Student Center Expansion

To meet its growing enrollment, Rowan University is expanding its Chamberlain Student Center by adding gathering and event spaces, meeting rooms, media rooms, a prep kitchen, coffee house, and amphitheater, as well as enhancements to the outdoor plaza and terrace. IMEG provided mechanical, electrical, plumbing, and fire protection engineering design services, along with construction administration,

New STEM Facility

The Hill School upgraded its STEM facilities by creating a new center, incorporating the existing arts and crafts building and science building with an addition to link the two into one cohesive structure. The new Shirley Quadrivium Center provides 522 students from 23 countries with spaces to learn math, chemistry, biology, physics, engineering, and computer

Renovation and Modernization

The Lutnick Library, formerly the Magill Library, was comprised of five different buildings constructed throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. The university wanted to modernize the facility by re-organizing spaces, demolishing and replacing what students called “dark and creepy” spaces, and preserving the historic spaces listed on the registry of the Haverford Township Historical Commission.

Student Housing Addition

IMEG provided mechanical, electrical, plumbing, and fire protection engineering design services, along with construction administration, for Bryn Mawr College’s new student housing. The project encompassed a partial demolition of an existing living-learning facility, Haffner Hall. Of the three separate buildings originally composing Haffner, two were demolished to make way for a three-story, 101-bed addition that

New Health, Literacy, and Recreation Hub

LEED Silver IMEG provided MEP and fire protection engineering design services, along with construction administration, for the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia’s (CHOP) new 76,530-sf South Philadelphia Community Health and Literacy Center, a result of the partnership between CHOP and the City of Philadelphia. Engineering design services included HVAC, fire alarm design, medical gases for the

New Off-Campus Student Housing

The McCartney Street Housing project comprises four phases, expanding the college’s residential capacity and bringing an accessible urban experience to the campus gateway. Phase I is a 165-bed, four-story building with student housing above first-floor retail space that includes a campus bookstore, bistro/café, and diner. IMEG provided mechanical, electrical, plumbing, and fire protection engineering design

Feasibility Study

Towering seven stories above suburban Montgomery County, the Glencairn Museum is an institution dedicated to the history of religious art. Constructed as a private residence in 1939, it was later adapted to display its owners’ collection of nearly 8,000 sacred artifacts. An IMEG 2017 feasibility study recommended replacing the original mechanical and electrical systems, and