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Demolition

12
Feb

Customers Website: VirginiaRestoration.com
Voice Over By: EZvoices.net

Damage to your home due to fire or flood can be devastating. Figuring out who to call, how to make a claim, or simply how to get your home repaired can be overwhelming when dealing with the aftermath of one of nature’s calamities. Virginia Restoration Services can help you pick up the pieces and put them back together again.

Built on quality workmanship, attention to detail, and an unwavering commitment to our customers, Virginia Restoration Services is uniquely qualified to handle the full spectrum of restoration needs, no matter how big or small. Our company is fully insured and boasts a Class A Contractors License. Our dedicated team includes specialists in fire and smoke restoration, water damage restoration, odor control and applied microbial remediation. Our employees meet the strictest standards set forth by the Institute of Inspection Cleaning and Restoration Certification.

The home you see here suffered an electrical fire on its front porch, which rapidly spread and ravaged the Chesterfield County home. Virginia Restoration Services dismantled the structure, breaking it down to its foundation. We then rebuilt the home from the ground up, working with the homeowner at every turn, ultimately making the home better than before.

Should your home or business be impacted by flood, fire or storm, one to call Virginia Restoration Services is all you need. You value your home. We value your trust.

Category : Construction | Demolition | Fire | Blog
14
Apr

This time lapse was a two day shoot. They worked for 48 hours straight to get the job done. We had two cameras in the same position.

Today, the Powhite Parkway is one of the most heavily-traveled corridors in the Richmond metropolitan area. Nearly 90,000 vehicles travel on the Powhite Parkway each day with that figure rising to more than 100,000 on peak days. From May until October 1996, extensive work to resurface the Powhite Parkway Bridge took place. The $2.8 million project involved replacing the deck surface with a concrete and latex mixture to extend the life of the facility. After re-striping, the number of northbound lanes on the bridge increased from four lanes to five.

The Powhite Parkway had an extensive construction project to widen the northbound and southbound lanes. The Split Plaza project was completed in the fall of 2008. Drivers noticed the new shift will happened in conjunction with the demolition of a section of the Powhite Parkway mainline toll plaza canopy. Construction crews removed two toll booths and a portion of the plaza canopy and the work was completed by Sunday, April 13, 2008.

Upon completion in the summer 2008, the Powhite Plaza Expansion/Split Plaza Project introduce three ORT lanes, also known as express lanes, in each direction along the Parkway, allowing E-ZPass customers to travel at near highway speeds through barrier-free toll lanes. This project was the final phase of the Richmond Metropolitan Authority’s ambitious program, dating back to 2001, which will significantly reduce traffic congestion on the Parkway.

The official pronunciation is “POW-hite,” in the same manner as you pronounce “Powhatan” and “Powder.” The name comes from the name of the creek that the parkway follows. References to the creek by this name have been found in records more than 300 years old, and the creek probably was named by Native Americans who were in the area long before colonial settlers arrived.

Category : Demolition | Blog