Word: designations
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Brooklyn, N.Y., however, entrepreneur Tim McCarthy is ignoring the economic uncertainties and plunging ahead with expansion of his start-up Great Harbor Design Center. McCarthy's company, founded in July 1997, makes synthetic stone from recycled glass and concrete. He is planning to make large equipment purchases in December and to start full production in February. He says he's not bothered much by what is going on around him. "I'd always assumed we would be dealing in a very volatile market," he says. "I knew there was going to be a downturn. I just didn't know...
...members work hard to reclaim the dimensionality of their roles, the reappearance of the strobe makes this a hard battle to win. While their lines seem to be well-delivered, the meaning is often obscured by the confusion of the backwards plot or the intrusion of the awkward stage design...
...together (What better way to make a man obsessed with time mad than by reversing time's direction?), implementing them was too unwieldy to be well-executed. The ambitiousness of the project exacted a heavy toll on the production quality, creating confusion in both the staging and the set design. As with much of the production, the design suggested a wealth of ideas and inspiration, but very little selectivity on the part of the designers as to which of these ideas to develop and refine. Though it was interesting to see a brainstorm in the flesh, this production angle...
This network of tunnels will merge and surface near the Fleet Center, crossing the Charles River in an elegant 14-lane, cable-stayed bridge. The bridge will be the widest in the world and, in addition, the first asymmetrical bridge ever built. In its design, Swiss architects tried to evoke the Bunker Hill Monument (though some might question choosing the ugliest monument in Boston to welcome people to the city...
...already been under construction since 1991 and those involved expect it to continue until 2004. As of September, 98 percent of the design has been completed but only 43 percent of the construction. The construction was originally projected to be finished by 1998, then 2000, and then 2002. The current estimate is 2004, but many Bostonians agree that they'll be dealing with the Dig for at least another 10 years. The entire cost of this monstrous public works project--the biggest engineering feat since the Panama Canal--is $10.8 billion; 70 percent being funded by the generous U.S. government...