Rudolph and Sletten

Rudolph and Sletten is a general contracting firm on the West Coast of the United States providing general contracting and construction management services. The company is headquartered in San Carlos, California with regional offices in San Francisco, Roseville, Irvine, and San Diego.

Rudolph and Sletten headquarters in Redwood City

In 1959 Onslow H. "Rudy" Rudolph formed a small contracting company, O.H. Rudolph, General Contractor, based out of his garage in Los Altos, California. In 1962, Kenneth G. Sletten joined the business as partner and the company was renamed Rudolph and Sletten, Inc., General and Engineering Contractors. The company has 145 LEED certified professionals in-house. LEED certified projects constructed by Rudolph and Sletten include the Molecular Foundry, located on the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory campus, as well as other sustainable projects as the Sun Microsystems Santa Clara Campus and Shaklee World Headquarters. Rudolph and Sletten was listed third amongst West Coast Construction companies with the most LEED certified employees according to Sustainable Industry magazine.[1]

The company is the number one healthcare builder in the state of California according to the San Diego Transcript.[2] Rudolph and Sletten is ranked the 7th largest general contractor according ENR magazine's 2007 Top General Contractors list.[3] The firm also has a long history with Apple Inc., having served as the general contractor for both Apple Campus and Apple Park.[4]

References

  1. "LEED-Accredited Professionals on the West Coast". Green Building. Sustainable Industries. January 2007.
  2. "Rudolph and Sletten: Building San Diego health care facilities for two decades". Who's Who in Healthcare. The Daily Transcript. 2008-06-24.
  3. "Top Contractors in California". (California Construction). 2007-04, pp. 21, 31.
  4. Donato-Weinstein, Nathan (4 May 2015). "Apple hires new spaceship general contractor as questions swirl about construction delays". Silicon Valley Business Journal. San Jose: American City Business Journals. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.