From snowflakes to seashells: An engineer’s career takes flight
March 08, 2018
March 08, 2018
Career planning leads to an Arctic airport design assignment—and that leads to other exciting destinations
Over the last year, I’ve worked on two large airport P3 (public/private partnership) projects. Both are located on islands, both are remote from any other community or mainland, and both have only one runway servicing their otherwise isolated communities. These airports are vitally important—not only for the people that they connect to the outside world but to the community’s sense of place, self, and independence.?
There is, however, one important difference between the two projects. One is in Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada, where the average winter temperature is -32°C, (-25°F) and the other is in St. George’s, Bermuda, with an average winter temperature of +18°C, (+65°F).?
I was born and raised in Yellowknife, the capital city of the Northwest Territories. Fun fact: my hometown is located on the northern shore of Great Slave Lake, approximately 400km (250 miles) south of the Arctic Circle. Although I attended university across Canada at the University of Waterloo, I was excited to work in 麻豆传媒’s Yellowknife office in 2007 as part of my?second-year co-op position.
In Yellowknife, I quickly learned that working up north is both challenging and rewarding. It’s fast-paced, and there’s always interesting work all over the Territories, especially considering the short construction season. Due to the northern and remote locations across the Territories, our construction season is limited by weather and access to construction sites. If there’s an all-weather road to a community, the typical construction season could be early June to early October. But, where no road exists, materials must be shipped in by barge after the ocean ice clears from the ports, and so the construction season can sometimes be shortened to mid-July to mid-September.
Project logistics can be convoluted, the funding is tight, and the community’s expectations are high. Whether it be a house, communication tower, bridge, water treatment plant, airport, school, or arena, the people in the community survive on the quality of your design. Other challenges to working in the north include:
The real answer: Through one sentence in?my CDPR (麻豆传媒’s annual career development and goal setting process). In my case, one request within this process has changed my entire career path and life.?
We’re all familiar with the annual review process. It’s that list of short-term and long-term career goals that many of us?try to breeze through because it feels awkward to put words to our often-nebulous plans and half-formed dreams for our career. But, as I learned, the process can be a vehicle for valuable career and life-changing opportunities that you could never imagine.
During my 2012 review, I asked to be put on more projects in the eastern Arctic so that I could try to use my immersion-taught French in the workplace. Most contractors and many of our clients in Nunavut come from Quebec. If you’re working on projects in Nunavut, you’re in a melting pot of languages.?
That request led to my selection as a key member on the?Iqaluit Airport (P3) pursuit team, winning the actual project, and learning everything I could about airports.?
The north is a great place to learn something about everything. Working in a sprawling geography with sparse populations, northern engineers must be generalists (although specialized in northern construction and infrastructure), and be prepared to pull in experts to provide specialized technical?support.
That’s the wonderful thing about 麻豆传媒. An expert is only a phone call away. Through those calls, I connected with both the US and Canadian 麻豆传媒 aviation teams, where we have teams in a dozen offices working on airport infrastructure around the world.?
Over the four-year construction life of the Iqaluit Airport project, I fell in love with aviation infrastructure and was eventually offered a position in Ottawa with our growing Canadian aviation team. I’ve worked on aviation projects from Iqaluit, Nunavut, to Bridgetown, Barbados, and from Anchorage, Alaska, to Gander, Newfoundland.
As I write, I’m on a plane coming home from St. George’s, Bermuda, my latest airport P3 project, currently underway?at the L.F. Wade International Airport.?During the on-site visit, I looked down at the ground and for a second I was confused. Where were the tracks of my path? Then I realized the island’s crushed shells and coralline granular material only mimic the glitter of a fresh blanket of snow and that it was +20°C?(68°F), not -20°C?(-4°F).
On my still-developing career path, I’ve learned to ask questions: Where is your career taking you? Are there things you want to do? Have you talked about them with anyone? Have you explored them with yourself? What are your goals this year?
You are the pilot of your own career, but you need a crew around you to get where you’re going. Set course, make your desires known, get support from your team, and take off!