Building infrastructure for a changing industrial landscape — where civil engineering meets strategic industries.
Skyline Builders operates within one of the most fundamental layers of the global economy: infrastructure. Roads, drainage systems, pipelines, and civil engineering projects form the physical backbone supporting urban development, transportation, and industrial growth.
As governments increase investment in infrastructure modernization and energy systems, Skyline's positioning grows increasingly strategic. Under Executive Chairman Paul E. Mann, the company is pivoting into critical minerals and nuclear fuels — where infrastructure spending intersects with energy security and advanced manufacturing.

Infrastructure development meets emerging strategic industries.
Paul Mann (founder of $1B+ ASPI) brings a track record of building critical materials companies. $3.5M personal investment demonstrates alignment.
U.S. imports 99% of uranium. Nuclear power generates 20% of electricity. The nation pledged to quadruple nuclear capacity by 2050 — creating urgent supply needs.
LOI to acquire ocean-based uranium extraction company — technology licensed from U.S. DOE's PNNL with $20M+ in research backing.
HQ relocation to Washington D.C. aligns with government engagement. Infrastructure spending increasingly intersects with energy security priorities.
$40M+ raised from institutional investors. $31.6M Series B closed February 2026 demonstrates market conviction in the strategic vision.
Civil engineering operations provide revenue base while critical minerals pivot creates transformative upside potential.
January 2026 — Built ASPI to $1B+ market cap. 25-year career in critical materials.
February 2026 — $31.59M from institutional investors.
20% stake in Delaware LLC with Asian mineral assets for $20M.
Ocean-based uranium extraction licensed from U.S. DOE's PNNL.
SuperCritical Technologies acquisition
Government approvals for Asian assets
Additional critical minerals acquisitions
U.S. policy support for domestic supply chains