ISG bagged a 2m sq ft mega-shed near Wakefield for the Mountpark Group, accounting for most of its estimated £267m haul of work last month.
Hard on its heels in second place follows Vinci. The firm scooped the biggest single order of the month with a £175m job to build a steel and concrete cased LNG containment tank the size of the Royal Albert Hall on the Isle of Grain for National Grid.
Contracts league data collected by construction information specialist Barbour ABI, kept Kier in pole position in the rolling 12-month work won rankings.
It is still being closely tracked by Balfour Beatty and Morgan Sindall, which this month switched order in second and third place.
Click for full contractor and client rankings and market data
Among the other big shed wins for the month, Buckinghamshire-based TSL Projects secured a 1.2m sq ft distribution centre for retail giant Lidl at Houghton Regis off junction 11 of the M1. While rival big shed builder Winvic secured a cold warehouse in the East Midlands for NewCold Advanced Cold Logistics.
During February, Sir Robert McAlpine confirmed it would deliver the phased Hockley Mills build to rent development in Birmingham’s Jewellery Quarter.
Also in the West Midlands, McAleer & Rushe secured an 8,000-bed student scheme in Coventry located on De Montfort Way near the University of Warwick for developer ES Coventry.
New-look contracts league and market data pages
The Enquirer has introduced a new construction data page offering easy-to-access market intelligence to help you do better business.
Alongside contracts leagues and daily tender invites, it helps you make informed business decisions with coverage of breaking economic news, latest workload and tender prices forecasts.
There is also a snapshot of current freelance labour rates and a guide to the best and worst payers within the major Tier 1 contractors.
For those looking to navigate the ever-changing world of contract and employment law, lawyers at Fenwick Elliot also give you the benefit of their expert insight.
And, of course, it’s all completely free for readers.
Click here to take a look.