1940s Less than 2 months after Parsons was founded, they were hired to provide turnkey engineering, management, and oil well drilling services to
the great divide in Colorado, United States. In 1948, Parsons began work to develop naval missile facilities at
Point Mugu Missile facility. Also in 1948, the
Atomic Energy Commission created the
Idaho National Engineering Laboratory reactor so that it could conduct advanced nuclear experiments with civilian and military reactors. Parsons designed all facilities for test and support operations—including the largest cast-in-place concrete arch ever poured, a span of 3,000 feet.
1950s In 1952, the U.S. Army awarded Parsons a multi-year design and construction contract role for numerous laboratory and test facilities at the
Redstone Arsenal in
Huntsville, Alabama. In January 1953, Parsons began work on the construction of Turkey's first oil refinery near Batman, Turkey. Between 1957 and 1960, Parsons designed Port Arguello Launch Complex 1 under contract to the U.S. Navy to support the launch of
MIDAS and
SAMOS programs using
Atlas missiles. The facility was renamed
Launch Complex 3 when the Air Force assumed control of the base from the Navy. In June 1959, Parsons was awarded a contract for
Titan ICBM facility design to be constructed near Moses Lake Washington.
1960s In 1961, Parsons designed the installation plans for each of the 1,000
Minuteman intercontinental ballistic missiles, which were used by the U.S. Air Force during the
Cold War. In 1964, Ralph M. Parsons managed the design of the
U.S. Treasury Philadelphia Mint expansion. Parsons created all construction and equipment specifications, oversaw construction, and prepared operations and maintenance manuals. In 1962, Parsons commenced design efforts as civil architect-engineer for the
Titan III Integrate, Transfer, and Launch (ITL) launch complex at
Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. Upon completion, the complex became known as
Launch Complex 40 and
Launch Complex 41. Features of the ITL design included the
Vertical Integration Building (VIB) and Solid Rocket Motor Assembly Building (SMAB). In February 1963, Parsons was contracted to design the Apollo Spacecraft Propulsion System Development Facility at White Sands New Mexico. In 1964, Parsons created a technical and economic blueprint for the
North American Water and Power Alliance (NAWAPA), specifically in the United States, Canada and Mexico. The plan outlined concepts to build an integrated system of dams, channels, tunnels, reservoirs, hydroelectric plants, and pumping stations. The plan ultimately did not move forward due to environmental concerns and cost. In 1966, Parsons has served as general engineering consultant for the
DC Washington Metro in Washington, D.C., which is a $11 billion, 103-mile rapid transit rail system connecting Washington, D.C., to its many suburbs. In 1968, Parsons designed and constructed the entire Honolulu Airport in Honolulu, Hawaii (which is now referred to as the
Daniel K. Inouye International Airport), including a 12,000-foot runway on an offshore reef to minimize noise in Honolulu. The runway is still used today. In 1968, Parsons began work to upgrade the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) by providing plans, specifications, and standards to upgrade air traffic controls in 19 facilities. Today, Parsons provides 24/7/365 technical support services in all nine FAA regions and two specialized FAA centers. Again in 2001, Parsons was the prime contractor to implement modernization plans for the national airspace system.
1970s In 1970, Parsons was hired by BP and ExxonMobil to perform engineering studies in Alaska to determine if the company could overcome the technical and logistical engineering challenges in Arctic oil production. Following arctic oil production study, Parsons was hired in 1974 as managing contractor for all oil and gas facilities for BP and Exxon's east side portion of Prudhoe Bay, Alaska. Also in 1974, Parsons provided modernization and construction program services for the new construction on more than 100 major U.S. postal installations. In October 1976, the
Federal Railroad Administration awarded Parsons, as part of a joint venture, the Northeast Corridor Improvement Program contract, which was to provide a 456-mile, high-speed rail service between Boston, New York, and Washington, D.C. In 1977, Parsons completed a 4-year design-build turnkey program to build the Jeddah Airport in Saudi Arabia (also known as the
King Abdulaziz International Airport). In 1978, Parsons developed facilities criteria for assembly, testing, and system support of the U.S. Air Force's MX missile system at
Vandenberg Space Force Base. In addition, as a subcontractor to
Martin Marietta, Parsons supported development of the
Space Shuttle ground system at Vandenberg. Also in 1985, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers selected Parsons to furnish design, systems integration, engineering, and procurement for the eight
chemical weapons incineration plants throughout the continental United States. In 1986, Parsons designed, engineered, and managed construction of the
Red Dog mine air and sea ports along with the entire complex. In 1987, Parsons engineered, designed and delivered the Titan solid booster rocket test stand at
Edwards Air Force Base in California. The test stand facility was originally designed by Parsons in the early 1960s to support Saturn V engine testing. Parsons rebuilt the facility again after a 1991 test failure of a Titan IV SRMU motor that caused significant facility damage. In 1988, Parsons was hired to expand the
Dulles (IAD) and
Ronald Reagan (DCA) airports. Parsons also continued to oversee rehabilitation of the
Brooklyn Bridge that had been started by bridge firm Steinman, Boynton, Gronquist, and Birdsall which had been acquired by Parsons that year.
1990s In 1992, the
Port of Los Angeles selected Parsons to design the Pier 300 $60 million dry bulk terminal for international commodities such as coal and petroleum coke. Also in 1992, Parsons provided engineering cleanup services to the
Department of Energy for its uranium enrichment facilities in Ohio. The project was worth $125 million. In 1993, The
Southern Nevada Water Authority selected Parsons as PM/CM for their $2 billion capital improvement program to increase water capacity for the Las Vegas Valley. The company continues to provide program and construction management services to SNWA most recently being awarded $150M contract in July 2023. This facility houses the world's most powerful laser. Additionally in 1995, Parsons paid the U.S. $3.2 million to settle fraud claims, the settlement comes from allegations that Parsons knowingly overbilled the government on two Air Force contracts. In 1996, Parsons was awarded a contract by the
USAID to reconstruct Bosnia-Herzegovina, in the Balkans, after the war. In 1997, Parsons began the structural rehabilitation and catenary designs that incorporated electrifying the railroad tracks of the Tagus River Bridge (also known as
the 25 de Abril Bridge) in Lisbon, Portugal. The unexploded ordinances had accumulated in the island of
Kaho`olawe. In 1999, Parsons completed the design for the New Baiyun Airport (now called the
Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport) in Guangzhou, China. Also in 1999, Parsons was selected to design the
Woodrow Wilson Bridge.
2000s On September 19, 2002, Parsons was awarded a contract to design, build commission and operate the
Savannah River Salt Waste Processing Facility (SWPF) in South Carolina by the department of energy. In 2020, the company completed all steps to begin the treatment of radioactive waste at the facility. The bridge was completed and opened in 2007. In June 2003, a joint-venture team led by
Bechtel National, Inc. and Parsons Corporation was selected to destroy chemical weapons at the
Bluegrass Army Depot in Kentucky. The final munition was destroyed in July 2023. In 2004, Parsons served as project manager to cleanup and restore Onondaga Lake in New York. The same year, a $29.5 million contract was given to both Parsons and Gilbert Southern/Massman Construction to redo a portion of the
Escambia Bay Bridge near
Pensacola, FL after
Hurricane Ivan made landfall and knocked off 58 spans of the original bridge and misaligned 66 other spans. Traffic destined for the bridge was rerouted onto
US 90 (exit 17 on
I-10) for 2 months while construction was taking place, which caused severe traffic jams. The westbound bridge opened to traffic on October 4, six days ahead of schedule, while the eastbound lanes opened to traffic on November 20, 66 days after Ivan made landfall and 27 days ahead of schedule. Both contractors received $1.5 million in bonuses for the early completion. In March 2004, Parsons was awarded a contract for a $243 million project to build 150 healthcare centers in
Iraq. The same joint venture (Parsons-Odebrecht) was awarded another contract for the airport to improve the baggage handling system. In 2006, in a joint-venture, Parsons provided the design review and program/construction supervision for the construction of the
Dubai Metro.
2010s In 2010, Parsons, in a joint-venture, completed the $575 million, LEED-silver-certified Tom Bradley International Terminal Improvements and Baggage Screening Systems Project at
Los Angeles International Airport. Parsons was the construction manager for this project. Parsons was also a part of the terminals update in 2006. The company also played a role in post 9/11 Pentagon rebuilding efforts, providing program and construction management services. In 2011, in a joint-venture, Parsons completed construction on the
John James Audubon Bridge in Mississippi. The John James Audubon Bridge is the longest cable-stayed bridge in the Western Hemisphere and is also the first Design-Build project undertaken by the
Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development. On November 8, 2012, the bridge was awarded the
Design-Build Institute of America (DBIA) 2012 Design Excellence Award. In October 2014, Parsons was awarded a contract by Tecon Investments to oversee major elements of the
Dubai Design District (D3). In April 2016, Parsons received a construction management contract from the Architect of the Capitol to support the restoration, maintenance and renovation of federal structures on the Capitol campus. In 2016, construction was completed for the
World Trade Center Port Authority Trans-Hudson Transportation Hub (PATH). Parsons was responsible for the infrastructure group design of the project, as well as supervising the civil, geo-technical and environmental design of the project. It also oversees the installation of the project's communication and safety systems. On June 12, 2017, Parsons accepted the award for the Operational Efficiency Project of the Year from the California Transportation Foundation (CTF) for their Intelligent Transportation System work on the I-80 Smart Corridor Project. In 2017, Parsons worked with Abu Dhabi Airports Company as program manager for the Abu Dhabi International Airport expansion. In April 2018, Leidos selected Parsons for the lead construction role to revitalize the US Antarctic research base at McMurdo Sound,
Antarctica in support of the National Science Foundation
US Antarctic Program. In December 2019, it was announced that Parsons and
Leidos Holdings Inc. had earned spots on a $4 billion contract to support the cleanup of a former nuclear weapons site in southern Washington state.
2020s In May 2020, Parsons was awarded the $61 million owner's engineer contract supporting construction of the new
Windsor-Detroit (Gordie Howe) Bridge In September of the same year, Parsons was awarded the Recovery of Airbase Denied by Ordnance (RADBO) contract by the Air Force. The contract calls for production and delivery of armored vehicles equipped to clear mines or unexploded ordnance from airfields using three-kilowatt ZEUS laser weapon. In December 2020, Parsons was awarded a four-year, $37 million competitively awarded contract by Naval Facilities Engineering Command Southwest (NAVFAC SW) to support rebuilding efforts at Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake. In May 2021, Parsons secured a contract with $185 million ceiling to deliver Integrated Solutions for Situational Awareness (ISSA) for Space Systems Command In July, Parsons was awarded a seven-year contract from the
Missile Defense Agency to continue work on the TEAMs Next contract to support the development of defense systems. In June 2022, the
Defense Health Agency awarded Parsons a spot on a potential $10 billion multi-award contract for military medical research and development support. In 2023, Parsons was confirmed as the delivery partner for
The Line at
NEOM, a 170 km linear city being built in Saudi Arabia. On July 7, 2023, U.S. officials announced that the final munition in the nation's obsolete stockpile of chemical weapons at the
Blue Grass Chemical Agent Plant has been safely destroyed by
Bechtel National, Inc. and Parsons. The team used neutralization and explosive destruction to eliminate the munition. Also in March, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Office of Space Commerce selected Parsons Corporation to develop key elements of its civil
space traffic coordination system called the
Traffic Coordination System for Space, or TraCSS. The systems integration contract has a period of performance of 2-years and a potential value of $27 million. In June 2025, Parsons announced a partnership with IBM in pursuit of opportunities stemming from the Federal Aviation Administration's plans to update and modernize the United States air traffic control system. Also in June 2025, Parsons was named #1 Program Management Firm by Engineering News-Record (ENR)'s annual list of Top 50 Program Management Firms. In February 2026, Parsons ran a two-year project led by Honda in collaboration with i-Probe Inc. and the University of Cincinnati. Over the duration of the project, Honda test vehicles with vision and LiDAR sensors covered approximately 3,000 miles in central and southeastern Ohio. These tests were conducted in urban and rural areas, during variable weather conditions, and at different times of day. On February 6, 2026, The US Army got a high-tech boost against rogue drones along the southern border with DroneArmor, a next-gen counter-unmanned aerial system (C-UAS) platform developed by Parsons Corporation. On February 17, 2026, the
Department of Homeland Security announced that Parsons will oversee and manage the completion of
Mexico-United States border wall construction. In a February 10, 2026 interview on The
Dan Bongino Show, then-Secretary
Kristi Noem stated that DHS is on track to complete border wall construction by January 2028. On February 17, 2026, The Pima County Sheriff's Department requested Parsons support to assist with the
search for Nancy Guthrie. Parsons deployed BlueFly®, a Bluetooth and Wi-Fi sensor intended for search and rescue operations in challenging environments. The technology has been used on a variety of air and ground vehicles, and on foot in austere terrain. It provides first responders with a heat map to identify signals within a search area. BlueFly® was used on Feb. 3 during the Pima County Sheriff's Department Search and Rescue helicopter search over the Guthrie neighborhood. The technology was subsequently used for additional search operations by helicopter, ground vehicles, and on foot. On February 18, 2026, Sealing Technologies, a Parsons Corporation company, announced that it received an Intent to Award notification from the United States Cyber Command (USCYBERCOM) for a sole-source contract to begin production on the company's Joint Cyber Hunt Kit (JCHK) solution. The three-year period of performance contract is new work for the company with an anticipated ceiling value of up to $500 million. == Management ==