Many people, in many ways, serve the best
interests of the construction industry. The editors of ENR
have chosen the following individuals for innovations and
achievements featured in the magazine in 2005 and the selection of Dwayne McAninch, CEO of McAninch Corp. and pioneer in global positioning system technology for earthmoving, as our Award of Excellence Winner. The construction industry congratulates all of these achievers. Click below to read more about Award of Excellence winner and the Award of Excellence History.
Corissa M. Anderson
Patrick A. Burns
Robert F. Bobby Clair
Samir Emdanat
Duane P. Gapinski
John S. Gonsalves
David Gottfried
Alain Granet
Dennis J. Hall
William P. Henry
Thomas Jee
Ron Klemencic
David J. Markey
J. Dwayne McAninch
Terry R. Murphy
Tom Røtjer
David A. Schuff
Richard D. Short
E. Sreedharan
Richard D. Thorpe
Ted Totten
Nancy R. Tuor
Charles E. Williams
Roy A. Williams
Michael Yu |
Award of Excellence Winner 2005
Dwayne McAninch
Award
of Excellence: History
For 40 years, Industry Gathers To Honor Constructions
Best
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| Anderson |
The unprecedented and successful steel fabrication, preassembly
and lift of the 5,400-ton retractable roof of the $450-million
Arizona Cardinals Stadium near Phoenix would not have happened
without the expertise of veteran steel fabricator-erector
David A. Schuff and the effort
of Corissa M. Anderson, project
engineer in Phoenix for Hunt Construction Group Inc. Schuff,
co-founder of Phoenix-based Schuff Steel Co., brainstormed
the lift scheme to ease erection and ensure safety. His innovative
approach drove design and construction of the entire stadium.
It called for preassembling the 700 x 257.5-ft steel roof
on short ground shores, and jacking the truss assembly, including
the travel mechanism, up 150 ft in slots in the roofs
concrete supercolumns. As mission control commander
for the lift, Anderson coordinated and synchronized the work
of more than 200 site personnel during 12-hour workdays over
a one-week period. The lift, which she executed with military-like
authority, depended on six months of strategic planning, well-rehearsed
choreography and a carefully laid-out communications network.
On Dec. 3, roof panels parted for the first time, without
a hitch.
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| Clair |
Coaxed from a planned retirement after 37 years with the South
Carolina Dept. of Transportation, Robert
F. Bobby Clair led the $630-million design-build
construction of the Cooper River Bridge to an early and on-budget
finish. Sporting a signature 1,546-ft-long main span, North
Americas longest cable-stayed bridge handles traffic
for hurricane-prone Charleston. Experts praise the complex
projects construction in just four years as an extreme
feat. Clair was the go-to guy who won the trust
of public officials, as well as the projects diverse
contracting and worker communities. His diplomatic and leadership
skills produced the cohesion critical to the bridges
successful finish in 2005. Clair is now an executive at Omaha-based
HDR Inc.
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| Williams |
The pace of upgrading security at U.S. embassies around the
world dramatically increased under Charles
E. Williams, director and chief operating officer of
the U.S. State Dept.s Bureau of Overseas Buildings Operations.
Through discipline and accountability, the retired Corps of
Engineers major general turned around a program that
had been limping along. By implementing standard embassy designs,
design-build project delivery and an industry advisory panel,
Williams won congressional confidence. This year, he won funding
for the largest ever embassy compound, to be built in Baghdad.
The worldwide embassy program now totals $17.5 billion over
14 years. Twenty-three new and safer embassies and consulates
have been completed, 40 projects are in design or construction
and 14 more are in the pipeline for 2006.
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| Williams |
If
not for the foresight and meticulous planning of Roy
A. Williams, aviation director at Louis Armstrong New
Orleans International Airport, the facility might not have
played its crucial role in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina
as an emergency ward, military operations center and even
a temporary morgue. Just two weeks after the hurricane had
forced thousands of evacuees to take shelter at the airport,
Williams and his team restored commercial service. His early
attention to airport infrastructure, which dated back to his
arrival at the facility 4.5 years earlier, was key to its success
in the Katrina emergency. He prioritized airfield reconstruction,
including raising its levee barrier by 6 feet, which kept
the facility dry and operational.
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| Yu |
China-born Michael Yu combined
engineering training in his homeland and work experience in
the U.K. to shape a template for roadbuilders now constructing
Chinas National Trunk Highway System. One key component
is the 118-kilometer, $827-million Chongzun Expressway, which
cuts through Guizhou provinces razorbacked Dalhousan
Mountains. The Asian Development Bank, which is financing
more than one-third of project costs, required strong and
independent project management. As project director for Halcrow
Chinas management team, Yu established a homegrown cadre
of young but capable resident engineers and ensured they were
empowered to keep owner and contractor on track. He melded
homegrown cultural sensitivity and western project management
systems to deliver the complex job on time and on budget.
With 121 bridges and 17 tunnels, this segment of Chinas
interstate is a civil engineers ultimate
challenge. Yus systematic approach to quality control
advances Chinas goal of building a world-class highway
system.
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| Hall |
Convincing hundreds of thousands of construction specifiers,
product manufacturers and end-users to accept an updated numbering
system for materials, components and technologies seemed to
be an almost impossible task for Charlotte, N.C., architect
Dennis J. Hall. Many members
of the Construction Specifications Institute knew that the
existing 42-year-old MasterFormat numbering system was out
of date, but they could not agree on a new structure. Volunteering
to lead the reform effort, Halls patient but persistent
advocacy for a radically different matrix produced a winning
compromise standard that is now required on federal projects.
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| Henry |
Believing there is strength in numbers,
William P. Henry, as 2005 president of the American
Society of Civil Engineers, led the associations major
step toward stamping out global corruption in construction.
Engaging nearly 90 other industry groups around the world,
ASCE created an historic charter that compels members to report
bribery, fraud and kickbacks on construction projects the
world over. By signing the document, individuals and groups
agree to report infractions. Violations could lead to revoking
a professional engineering license. In a bold gesture, Henry
was the first to sign the charter. Some 100 signatories have
followed. Henry, a retired executive of Schaaf & Wheeler
Consulting Civil Engineers, has served as a high-profile,
anti-corruption ambassador to the World Bank, Transparency
International and other global lenders and advocacy groups.
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| Short |
In a field where technology and change are often resisted,
Richard D. Short, senior geotechnical
consultant for Kleinfelder Inc., constantly searches for innovation.
Grappling with slope instability, he combined his own creativity
and knowledge with overseas technology to invent a plate pile
system that could revolutionize foundation work. Shorts
system, applied at a housing development in Danville, Calif.,
involves plates affixed to steel poles set into stable strata
beneath loose soil that transmit slide forces downward. Researchers
at the University of California-Berkeley say the 1-in.-thick
plates can increase the factor of safety between 20 and 50%
and save significant costs. For a 10,000-sq-ft slope, plate
piles cost about $50,000, compared to hundreds of thousands
of dollars using more traditional methods. The new system
could be an effective solution for thousands of homes at risk,
many in California endangered by annual mudslides.
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| McAninch |
The pioneering and persevering work of J.
Dwayne McAninch is set to revolutionize design and
construction in the field. The founder and CEO of Des Moines-based
McAninch Corp. has spent decades perfecting and advocating
use of global positioning system technology in earthmoving,
which now is gaining widespread acceptance around the world.
Once shunned at jobsites due to hardware and software glitches,
global positioning technology has moved light years ahead
to prove that digital equipment controls can boost equipment
durability and extend field efficiency by more than 30%. More
contractors are adding the 21st-Century technology to their
fleets, and owners are offering incentives to firms that use
it. While some contractors would keep such an innovation to
themselves, McAninch has sought out and eagerly shared it
with his peers.
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| Gapinski |
Just days after Hurricane Katrinas floods devastated
New Orleans, Col. Duane P. Gapinski,
commander and district engineer of the Army Corps of Engineers
Rock Island, Ill., district, was tapped to lead its unprecedented
Task Force Unwatering mission. In an environment robbed by
disaster of modern tools of analysis and communication, Gapinski
never let the enormously complex task faze him as he methodically
led his team in scoping out the catastrophe and strategically
deploying resources across the terrains five drainage
basins. Gapinski then pushed back the water with a choreographed
sequence of levee and pump repairs that brought metropolitan
New Orleans out of the flood, well ahead of initial predictions,
despite the follow-on assault of Hurricane Rita.
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| Gonsalves |
Thanks to the zeal and initiative of John
S. Gonsalves, a former residential construction supervisor,
four disabled U.S. military veterans now live in new homes
built to make their lives as functional as possible. Finding
there were no nonprofit groups doing such work, Gonsalves
quit his job in 2004 to create his own, called Homes For Our
Troops. He and two assistants have now taken the cause nationwide,
inspiring contractors and building materials suppliers to
donate time, resources and labor to build homes for disabled
vets of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts. Two homes are
nearing completion and six more are under way, with 14 applications
being reviewed.
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| Murphy |
Since pledging in 2004 to shut 7,500 MW of old coal-fired
powerplants, Ontario has sought alternative sources of energy.
Provincial utility Ontario Power Generation Inc. targeted
its dormant 515-MW Pickering A Nuclear Unit 1 for an $825-million
rehabilitation and restart. A bungled restart at another Pickering
unit nearly halted the program, but Unit 1 project director
Terry R. Murphy overcame the
stigma, impressing officials with his clear vision and can-do
attitude. Murphy pushed management changes on the site and
overhauled its problem-plagued culture. As a result, he led
Unit 1 to a successful restart on schedule and within budget.
Murphys experience has helped spur new interest in nuclear
energy in Ontario. Since Unit 1s completion, another
provincial operator has announced its intention to restore
two other laid-up units to service.
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| Thorpe |
Municipal officials in and around Los Angeles thought they
would never see the $860-million first-phase of the Pasadena-to-L.A.
light rail line in operation. Years of community complaints
and political infighting stalled the job, until Richard
D. Thorpe, chief construction capital management officer
at the Los Angeles Metropolitan Transportation Authority,
became involved. Under Thorpe, the agency streamlined its
contracting approaches and schedules to complete the Gold
Line. He went on to coax contractors to get MTAs 14-mile
rapid busway project back on track after a six-month delay
due to lawsuits. Thorpe now leads the $900-million, six-mile
Gold Line light-rail extension, with tunneling now under way.
Many observers credit him for transforming transit construction
in Los Angeles from chronic failure into a string of ongoing
successes.
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| Sreedharan |
E. Sreedharan deferred retirement
in 1998 to become managing director of Indias Delhi
Metro Rail Corp., taking charge of a $2.3-billion effort to
build the first phase of New Delhis massive metro system.
He led that challenging 66-kilometer project to a phased completion
in December 2005. Sreedharan is credited with single-mindedly
knocking down the many obstacles that have bedeviled other
large Indian projects. This tough Indian manager cut through
the countrys notorious red tape, employed global best
practices and adopted safety steps not common in Indian construction.
Much more than a figurehead, Sreedharan isnt finished
yet. At age 73, he plans to remain on the job for three more
years to oversee completion of the next phase, leading toward
what will ultimately be a 180-km transportation marvel for
India.
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| Markey |
In an industry sector known for backroom bargaining and handshake
deals, David J. Markey, immediate past president of the Association
of Equipment Management Professionals, challenged construction
equipment manufacturers, dealers and fleet owners to reshape
their ethical conduct before scandal rocks their business.
Vice president of American Infrastructure and manager of its
$120-million fleet, Markey unveiled a new code of ethics for
the 700-member group in 2005 that many say is a first for
equipment professionals. Association members have unanimously
agreed to support Markeys preventive maintenance
checklist for business relations. While only one page, the
document speaks volumes about the need for honesty and fair
play among people who buy and sell billions of dollars in
construction equipment each year.
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| Emdanat |
The vision, fortitude and patience of Samir
Emdanat, manager for advanced technologies at GHAFARI
Associates LLC, allowed him to set a new benchmark in 3-D
virtual design and collaborative building. His achievement
on a 2.4-million-sq-ft engine assembly plant for General Motors
Corp. focused on the practical problems of implementing building
information modeling and sharing interoperable design data
among all participants, including building trades, on the
design-build team. Emdanat integrated technology into the
project workflow, not just for technologys sake, but
to improve the jobsite process. He was GHAFARIs tire
kicker, lever puller and, ultimately, its orchestra conductor,
as the entire team refined virtual design issues for the GM
plant and resolved conflicts before work began. The facility
was then built to the model, and delivered with
remarkable speed and ease.
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| Tuor |
Ten years ago, the U.S. Dept. of Energys former atomic
bombmaking complex at Rocky Flats, Colo., was a plutonium-laden
nightmare of 800 defunct factory buildings surrounded by thousands
of acres of contaminated soil, 16 miles from downtown Denver.
Initial estimates predicted a 70-year, $37-billion cleanup.
Those targets were later revised, but it was under the management
of Kaiser-Hill LLC and particularly, its president and CEO,
Nancy R. Tuor, that the task
was completed in 2005 at a $7-billion cost. She assumed cleanup
leadership in 2004, guiding work through its most furious
period. With labor and community tensions high, Tuor implemented
a new management strategy using non-traditional approaches
and incentives. She fast-tracked work and won the respect
of site employees and contractors, stakeholders, and regulators.
Now, with most Rocky Flats acreage set to become a wildlife
sanctuary, Tuor is carrying the message of safe and efficient
nuclear waste cleanup to other DOE sites and to countries
such as the U.K. and Russia. Both are coping with their own
Cold War nuclear waste legacies.
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| Røtjer |
In 1998, when officials of Norsk Hydro ASA in Oslo, Norway,
dreamed about developing the huge Ormen Lange natural gas
field beneath the Norwegian Sea, they knew it would require
extreme engineering. Tom Røtjer,
then chief of Hydros project technology unit, played
a key role in devising a solution that places all offshore
equipment on the seabed, 800 to 1,100 meters below the surface.
It is operated by control lines and pipelines from a landside
processing plant 120 kilometers away. Dispensing with need
for an offshore platform, the facility ties into the worlds
longest undersea pipeline to deliver its gas 1,200 km to the
U.K. Set to go on line in 2007, it will deliver up to 20% of Englands gas
supply. Now, as Ormen Langes development director, Røtjer
for the next decade is inventing electrically powered compressors
for installation on the seabed. He is getting ready for the
day when Ormen Langes flow will need a boost to maintain
its pressure stream.
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