With a deep and unparalleled knowledge of the New York construction market and a passion for the city it calls home, the General Contractors Association has supported our members for more than 100 years. Formed to build the world class infrastructure that made New York City great in the early 1900s, the GCA remains the respected voice of the heavy construction industry and a powerful advocate for investment to support sustainable growth.
GCA members built the city's subway system and the roads and bridges that connect the five boroughs of New York together and with the rest of the region. They dug the tunnels to bring clean water to the millions of city residents who desperately needed it. GCA members constructed the foundations for New York's iconic skyline, and the ports that make it a center of commerce.
GCA members built the city's subway system and the roads and bridges that connect the five boroughs of New York together and with the rest of the region. They dug the tunnels to bring clean water to the millions of city residents who desperately needed it. GCA members constructed the foundations for New York's iconic skyline, and the ports that make it a center of commerce.
Services
If you are a heavy civil contractor interested in working on building and rehabilitating New York's infrastructure, then this is the event for you. The GCA's event is focused on networking, plain and simple. Meet the contractors, estimators and compliance professionals who are building and bidding on projects in the New York City region and meet the region's infrastructure agencies and authorities in one forum.
Members of the General Contractors Association deliver the projects that make New York a world class city.
Building upon its more than 100 years of institutional history and with deep knowledge of the New York construction market, the General Contractors Association fights for its members by negotiating collective bargaining agreements, advocating for smart infrastructure investment, working with government and public utilities, offering training and guidance on safety and other industry priorities, and keeping up-to-date on information critical to the industry.
Building upon its more than 100 years of institutional history and with deep knowledge of the New York construction market, the General Contractors Association fights for its members by negotiating collective bargaining agreements, advocating for smart infrastructure investment, working with government and public utilities, offering training and guidance on safety and other industry priorities, and keeping up-to-date on information critical to the industry.
Their commitment to and culture of worksite safety exceeds any other segment of the construction market, and incident rates track well below the national, state and city construction industry averages. With a goal of zero incidents, we provide our contractor members practical, hands-on and classroom safety training.
NYC Department of Buildings: Suspension of all work on non-essential construction and demolition sites. A new Rasmussen Report national poll shows that 88 percent of both Democrat and Republican likely voters support legislation that would improve the nation's infrastructure. The poll was conducted.
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Price Barton
Jan 25, 2015
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