Creighton Construction & Development has completed the construction of several 7-Eleven convenience stores with fuel and covered canopy structures in Florida, with new locations in Fort Myers, Fort Pierce, Miami and Spring Hill.

The company has announced the completion of four new projects, including:

  • A redeveloped 7-Eleven located at 2977 Cleveland Ave. in Fort Myers, at the corner of Cleveland Avenue and Hanson Street. Creighton removed an existing bank building to construct a modern 7-Eleven, a 3,000-square-foot convenience store with 18 fueling positions, as well as two Wells Fargo ATMs with drive-thru and walkup service. Creighton’s team for this project was led by Will Anderson, development manager, Dane Edwards, construction project manager, and Tracy Saylor, superintendent. BatesForum was the project architect and Quattrone & Associates was the civil engineer.
  • A remodeled 7-Eleven located at 5000 U.S. Highway 1 in Fort Pierce, at the corner of Midway Road and Dixie Highway. The project included the transformation of an existing convenience store into a modern 7-Eleven, a 3,000-square-foot convenience store with eight fueling positions. Creighton’s team for this project was led by Roger Posey, development manager, and Mike Pursell, regional construction manager. Wilson’s Petroleum was contracted to provide construction and fuel installation services. BatesForum was the project architect and Bowman Consulting was the civil engineer.
  • A redeveloped 7-Eleven located at 10300 NW 12th in Miami, at the corner of Northwest 103rd Street and Northwest 12th Avenue. Creighton removed an existing building to construct a modern 7-Eleven, a 3,000-square-foot convenience store with eight fueling positions. Creighton’s team for this project was led by Roger Posey, development manager, Dane Edwards, construction project manager, and Chase Irwin, superintendent. BatesForum was the project architect and Keith & Associates was the civil engineer.
  • A new 7-Eleven located at 1285 Commercial Way in Spring Hill, near the Pasco-Hernando State College Spring Hill Campus. Creighton constructed a modern 7-Eleven, a 3,000-square-foot convenience store with 12 fueling positions. Creighton’s team for this project was led by Jacob Mossholder, development manager, Alex Scalzo, construction project manager, and Daniel Ring, superintendent. BatesForum was the project architect and S&ME was the civil engineer.

7-Eleven, Inc. is the premier name and largest chain in the convenience-retailing industry. Based in Irving, Texas, 7-Eleven operates, franchises and licenses more than 67,000 stores in 17 countries, including 11,800 in North America. Outside of the U.S and Canada, there are 7-Eleven convenience stores in Japan, Taiwan, Thailand, South Korea, China, Malaysia, Mexico, Singapore, Australia, the Philippines, Indonesia, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and United Arab Emirates.