Construction cases almost always involve project sites, which lend themselves to strong visual images. Yet often it is not possible to visit, much less photograph or video a site that is at the core of a case. The marine facility may be 200 feet under the sea, the construction site may no longer exist because the facility has been completed, or construction of the project has yet to begin. How will the jury get the picture?

Using existing photos, blueprints, site measurements when available, and the testimony of witnesses, Artists-at-Law is able to reconstruct the scene as an architectural rendering, seen from whichever angle is best suited to presenting your case.

Timelines, critical path flow charts, site maps, computer-enhanced photography and statistical graphics are also commonly used in presenting construction cases to the court.

Click on the icons to the right to see how courtroom graphics can be used in litigation.

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