Stay updated with the latest news in offshore construction. Explore developments in infrastructure, major projects, safety standards, and technological innovations shaping the offshore construction industry. Explore offshore construction in this comprehensive guide.
Learn about the process, safety measures, key players, and types of offshore construction projects like oil platforms and wind farms. Marine Construction Manson is one of the premier companies specializing in over-water and in-water work across strategic regions of North America. Whether your project involves wharves, piers, terminals, marinas, bridges, or other marine infrastructure.
In 2024, 128 major maritime construction projects broke ground in 2024, costing a combined total of roughly $52.63bn. Of these, the top ten most expensive maritime projects have a combined cost of around $26bn, according to the GlobalData construction project database. The total number of projects is a major increase from the year prior.
Our diverse client base operates in industries such as offshore renewables, oil & gas, aquaculture, and mining. Our systematic and transparent operation model enables our clients to phase in the right resources,at the right time, in complex offshore installation and construction projects. Experience matters.
Traylor has been working on marine projects located along the island and coastal waterway system since the 1950s, providing some of the nation's largest port authorities and the maritime industry with the construction of deep water container piers, wharf facilities, transit terminals, locks, and dams. Japan's Penta-Ocean Construction will build a 5,000. Marine Construction From wet side port and harbour and shoreside construction projects to foundations, cable laying, marine civil engineering projects and decommissioning, if it's constructed in the water but isn't a boat, you'll find it here.
Legal disputes continue, but a second offshore wind company can now resume construction off the East Coast after federal stop. Dominion Energy won a preliminary injunction Friday in federal court, allowing construction to resume on the $11.2 billion Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project off Virginia Beach 's coast. In December 2025, the U.S.
Department of the Interior paused the project for 90 days, leading the Richmond Fortune 500 utility to sue the government.