The Top Contractors list, published annually, ranks the general contractors, both publicly and privately held, based on construction contracting-specific revenue.
Renovation: #6 BCCI Construction
Design-Build: #21 BCCI Construction
Companies tweak their game plans as workers return to the office
Dawn Kawamoto | San Francisco Business Times
The Business Times, along with our sister papers in Sacramento and Silicon Valley, examined the office of the future in a special report. This part looks at how the return to work after Covid-19 is going in the Bay Area. Click here to read Part 1 on the initial return to work and Part 3 on how the office will look in the long run.
A new kind of office
San Francisco-based BCCI Construction, which has 335 employees, has given 129 of its workers access to 87 seats at its San Francisco office and 42 at its Mountain View office.
After government agencies gave Bay Area construction firms the green light to reopen on May 4, approximately 25% of the 129 workers went into the office, said Norma Adjmi, director of human resources for BCCI Construction Co. But over the past few weeks, those numbers have risen to the point where 70% to 80% of the 129 workers have returned to the office.
“What hit us between the eyes were a lot of people are afraid to come back into the office,” Adjmi said. “They had been sitting at home for two months and to come back was daunting.”
To ease concerns, BCCI gave workers a return-to-work pamphlet and online training of what to expect in the office before they arrive. In addition to requiring employees to wear masks, engage in social distancing and use disinfectants on their hands, the construction firm required employees to notify them if they are sick, take a Covid-19 test and report the results.
“Before Covid-19, we never got into our employees’ personal medical business but now we do because of the need to do contact tracing,” Adjmi said. A positive test result will lead to every employee who has been within 6 feet of contact or spent 15 minutes with that person to get a mandatory Covid-19 test.
Cynthia Gage, director of marketing for BCCI, said the company has taken several measures to reduce the spread of Covid-19, such as having one-way corridors, adding HEPA filters to certain work areas, keeping the patio door open for outside air to flow in to increase ventilation and requiring employees to disinfect their hands before reaching into the snack drawer for an individually package goodie…
Greater Bay Area Contractors
Ranked by 2016 Bay Area revenue from at-risk general contracting
Locally Researched by: Rosie Downey, Silicon Valley Business Journal May 12, 2017, 3:00am PDT
Greater Bay Area contractors ranked by 2016 revenue from at-risk general contracting.
#22 BCCI Construction Company, 1160 Battery St., #250, San Francisco, CA 94111
75 Greater Bay Area Contractors
Ranked by 2018 Bay Area revenue from at-risk general contracting
Locally Researched by: Julia Cooper, San Francisco Business Times May 10, 2019, 3:00am PDT
This List includes general contractors located in the Greater Bay Area, which is defined as Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Monterey, Napa, San Benito, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Solano and Sonoma counties. Information was obtained from company representatives.
#16 BCCI Construction Company, 1160 Battery St., #250, San Francisco, CA 94111
75 Greater Bay Area Contractors
Ranked by 2017 Bay Area revenue from at-risk general contracting
Locally Researched by: Julia Cooper, San Francisco Business Times May 10, 2019, 3:00am PDT
The Greater Bay Area’s largest contractors are ranked by local at-risk general contracting revenue in 2017. Information was obtained from company representatives.
#18 BCCI Construction Company, 1160 Battery St., #250, San Francisco, CA 94111
Ranked by Fiscal year 2019 companywide revenue
AIA San Francisco (AIASF) has selected BCCI Builders as the general contractor—to join Aidlin Darling Design as the project leads—for the new Center for Architecture + Design headquarters located in the historic landmark Hallidie Building storefront at 140 Sutter Street.
The new Center for Architecture + Design will be a demonstration of sustainability and inclusion, as well as technical innovation.
2019 Interior Architecture Citation Award
Using the qualities of light as inspiration, the design contrasts materials and form to create a progressive conference area and an unconventional lobby and entry experience. This space now speaks to the client’s ability to live on the edge of cultural trends and be the doers shaping a future narrative.
The jury believes that this is a testament to the fact that small and focused projects can be transformative – in this case, realigning reception and board room spaces to the client’s identity. Simultaneously minimal and warm, this is an elegant renewal of space with a carefully edited palette of materials and details animated by natural light.
List includes the fastest-growing middle market companies, which for the purposes of this List is defined as public and privately held companies with annual revenue between $25 million and $1 billion for each of the three published years.