Tunnels, a deep-water intake and floating pump stations all play a role in completing the new water supply system.
Learn MoreFreese and Nichols worked to help Texas’ river authorities fulfill their mission to control, store, preserve and distribute water during the 1960s. More than a dozen reservoirs were built under the firm’s supervision, from relatively modest lakes on the dry Texas plains to giant reservoirs in east and southeast Texas.
Learn MoreStefan Malhotra joins Freese and Nichols as the new Corporate Safety Manager. He will lead the firm’s safety program into the next phase of development as the firm continues to grow.
Learn MoreDam safety leader Wade Anderson, PE, joins our water resource design team with more than 35 years of experience to support water resource and federal projects across all the regions we serve, with a focus on the Central U.S. and Texas.
Learn MoreThe Texas Department of Public Safety Fallen Officers Memorial, designed in part by Freese and Nichols’ facilities team, was dedicated to officers who died in the line of duty.
Learn MorePaul Green, our Construction Management Group Manager for the Central Plains region, worked closely with Universal Studios and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation to create detour routes, provide guidance for roadway closures and assist with rolling roadblocks for the filming of 2024 movie “Twisters.”
Learn MoreGreat Place to Work and Fortune magazine have honored Freese and Nichols as one of the 2024 Best Workplaces for Millennials. This marks the firm’s return to this esteemed list for the first time since 2017, securing the 69th position.
Learn MoreThe City of Lubbock’s Water Tower Project has won a 2024 Illumination Award from the Dallas Chapter of the Illuminating Engineering Society. Electrical Engineers Dan Koss and Cihan Barnett collaborated with the City to find creative solutions in exterior lighting, while preserving night skies and reducing off-site light pollution.
Learn MoreDuring the 2023-2024 school year, members of the Freese and Nichols’ San Antonio office took on increased involvement with the […]
Learn MoreThe Holly Pump Station was designed in 1892 by John Hawley, who’d go on to found Freese and Nichols. More than 130 years later, the Holly Pump Station has expanded and remains central to the Fort Worth’s water supply.
Learn MorePaula Feldman
Join our Georgia water/wastewater experts at the 2024 GAWP Conference in Savannah. We look forward to seeing you!
Learn MoreFreese and Nichols’ collaboration with engineering students gave them practical experience and insights — and produced a refined tool for underwater surveys.
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