ISG is setting the pace in the industry. Explore the latest to learn about the finer details that make our projects and services unique, or how our teams are guiding industry-wide innovation. We don’t slow down. Here are a few things we are up to.
Building on a series of successful partnerships and projects to bolster its ballpark, the Mankato MoonDogs, a member of the Northwoods League, has exercised its rights with the landlord, the City of Mankato, to lease the naming rights of Franklin Rogers Park to ISG. The ballpark will be named ISG Field after the professional design and engineering firm that was founded in Mankato in 1973. ISG Field represents the MoonDogs’ commitment to providing top quality local baseball and an enriching fan experience. This is the latest update for the team, which has unveiled a new logo and has implemented several renovations for the ballpark in recent years.
ISG, a leading professional design firm in architecture, engineering, planning, and environmental solutions, announces plans to open a new office in Rochester, Minnesota. The addition will allow the firm to better serve its existing and growing client base and leverage the area’s diverse talent pool. The office will be the firm’s fourth location in Minnesota, adding to its six other offices across the Midwest in Wisconsin, Iowa, and South Dakota.
Inspired by progression, change, and adaption, ISG’s Manager of Applied Technology, Cody Meyer, describes his time with the firm over the last five years. Learn more about Cody, a beer and wine connoisseur, world-wide traveler, and video game fanatic, by reading below:
As we move into Clean Energy Week 2020 under the shadow of these massive weather-related phenomena, it has never been more clear that the time to reimagine our relationship with energy and the sources we get it from, is now.
ISG Principal and Practice Group Leader Dan Stueber PE, PLS shares his experiences as a professional land surveyor, as well as what challenges/opportunities are on the horizon for the field.
ISG has worked with communities throughout the Midwest to design roadways with pedestrian users in mind and challenge conventional understandings associated with bump outs and curb extensions.