Pathfinder / zedcor / leads / General Services Administration award to THE ROBINS & MORTON GROUP: CONSTRUCTION OF A NEW US COURTHOUSE IN GREENVILLE, …
No enrichment brief yet. The next Sonar pass will fill this in.
No founder records yet.
The $49.5M GSA courthouse construction in Greenville, Mississippi, is a federal facility with a multi-year build cycle and stringent security requirements. Federal courthouse projects require perimeter hardening (vehicle barriers, access control), continuous surveillance coverage during construction, and equipment protection across an active jobsite. The Robins & Morton Group is the GC; their federal work typically includes dedicated security subcontracts rather than ad-hoc procurement, which means early engagement is critical. The award appears in USAspending without a posted date, suggesting it predates the current fiscal year or represents a task-order release under a standing GSA construction contract. Federal courthouse projects typically mobilize 90-120 days after award and run 18-24 months. The absence of a posted date limits timing precision, but if mobilization has not occurred, the pre-construction phase is the window to secure a position in the security subcontract stack. Once site work begins, the security vendor is usually locked. Atlanta branch is the nearest at 314 miles, just outside the 300-mile standard coverage radius. This is a marginal-distance call: the federal courthouse tier and the project value justify the reach, but the branch would need to commit resources for site visits and on-call response. No warm-intro path exists. The recommended first move is a direct approach to Robins & Morton's project executive or superintendent (federal GCs typically assign a dedicated PE to courthouse work) proposing a pre-mobilization security walk-through focused on perimeter and mobile-tower staging for the construction phase.