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Arborio's Project Showcase
Use the links below to view some of our current projects.
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South Maple Street Bridge
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South Maple Street Bridge over Scantic River, Enfield
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Enfield Project
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During the ground breaking ceremony, Governor Jodi Rell declared the Rehabilitation of Bridge 00445, US Rout 5 Over I-91 in Enfield, CT to be the “1st State of Connecticut DOT project Funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Arborio Corporation and the State of Connecticut together are “PUTTING AMERICA TO WORK!”
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Brainard Road Bridge Replacement
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Arborio was awarded the contract to replace bridge #00814 Brainard Road by the State of CT Department of Transportation in 2008. The structure for the new bridge serves the purpose of increasing the clearance over Rte 15 southbound and expanding the radius to eliminate the existing sharp curve.
Also widening of the shoulders to help the congestion. Once the new bridge is completed the traffic will be allocated to this new bridge and the existing bridge will then be taken down.
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Agora Ballroom
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As stated in the Hartford Courant:
The Agora, a cavernous former bowling alley in an industrial area near the Hartford line, was once the place to play in Connecticut for bands on the way up or down. The building — home to Columbia Music Hall, Finnochio's East, Hard Rock Cafe, Stage West, Agora Ballroom and The Forum — could hold about 5,000 people and often drew crowds that large.
"I cut my teeth in that place with those amazing shows," said Hank Zukowski, a Hartford native who started in the late 1970s as a $5-an-hour bouncer and became co-owner of the Agora in the mid-1980s. "Santana, The Allman Brothers, Jerry Garcia, Little Feat, Tower of Power. We had groups on the way up and groups on the way down. We had boxing matches there. Stryper, a Christian heavy metal band, played. They threw tiny Bibles into the crowd."
The building, constructed in 1963 and not used for nearly 20 years, was too decrepit to be renovated and was knocked down last week by Arborio Corporation and Charter Oak Utility Constructors Inc. who owned the building.
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 Designed by Kelly Dicioccio |
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