About GMC Montgomery

GMC was founded in Montgomery more than 75 years ago, where our corporate headquarters remain today. Located in the Shoppes at Eastchase development, Montgomery is our largest office, serving as home to more than 100 employees and all of our in-house disciplines. Our commitment to “building communities” began with GMC co-founder George Goodwyn, who was also one of the four founders of Leadership Montgomery, an organization created to bring together community leaders to address critical issues and embrace change and diversity. Our team members continue this legacy of “building communities” throughout Montgomery and beyond, engraining themselves in the local community in various ways. Ranked among the Top 5 Best Commercial Architects in Montgomery by General Contractors Magazine, GMC is proud to be a large part of the River Region community.

Montgomery Office Leader

Regional Vice President, South Alabama, Board Member

Engineering Project Manager

Montgomery Culture

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Montgomery Projects

The area around Montgomery and neighboring cities are known as the River Region because of the confluence of the Coosa and Tallapoosa Rivers into the Alabama River. The rivers have been important routes for trade, commerce and recreation for centuries and the tradition will continue with a new Whitewater Park in downtown Montgomery. The City of Montgomery completed construction on an Olympic standards, recirculating white water park and entertainment venue dubbed “Project Catalyst” which city and county officials say will transform the area economy and draw 300,000 visitors to the River Region annually.
This GMC project is the first water filtration system in the state of Mississippi to utilize an ion exchange filtration system.
The three-story, three-wing structure will enhance the college’s current programs by making them more functional and providing students and faculty access to the most up-to-date technology, in addition to paving the way for future expansion of the allied health programs, allowing GCWCC to meet the demands of the ever-changing healthcare market.
GMC, in conjunction with Reynolds, Inc., completed a design-build project for Tenaska, Inc., which constructed two 885-MW generating stations. The generating stations convert natural gas to electric power. Total project cost for the intake facility was approximately $13 million. GMC’s services included planning, design, environmental, and construction monitoring of an MGD pump station and river intake and a 22-mile-30-inch ductile iron pipeline from the Alabama River near Statesville to Billingsley.
The 164,770-square-foot Park Crossing High School was meticulously designed to create an atmosphere that enhances teaching and learning and accommodates the needs of students. All of the spaces are visually connected to each other, generating a transparent environment that can be easily monitored.
GMC established a 93-acre site in Dallas County, Alabama as a single-user stream and wetland mitigation bank for the Alabama Department of Transportation (ALDOT). The site had previously been used for agriculture and silviculture activities. These activities resulted in a loss of wildlife habitat and unstable stream banks that were actively eroding, causing sediment loading to the Cahaba River.
Montgomery Office News