P2S Magazine Issue 2 | Page 4

A Commitment to Getting the Job Done Q & A W I T H D I R E CTO R O F C O N S T R U CT I O N M A N A G E M E N T D O U G C O WA N Construction is a complex process requiring cooperation between many different stakeholders with sometimes diverging interests. As construction booms throughout the country, the demand for construction managers, who supervise construction for owners and contractors, keeps growing. In California, the enormous growth of private development and transportation projects has led to tight labor market, with construction managers in high demand. This is music to the ears of Doug Cowan, who leads P2S CM as Director of Construction Management. Doug’s 30 plus years of experience successfully managing complex, award-winning construction projects in California and throughout the United States, has ideally positioned him to lead P2S CM as it seeks to expand with the overall construction market. We spoke to him about his career experience, his vision for the future of P2S CM, his thoughts on the current construction boom and why construction managers tend to be the unsung heroes of construction projects. Tell us about your career before P2S? My career has been a winding road that has taken me places I never would have imagined. I started out wanting to be an architect. After spending a year in the architecture program, I realized that although I was a good at drafting, I wasn’t an artist. Knowing I wanted to be involved in building construction, I switched to Construction Engineering Technology. At that time the program was an offshoot of civil, focusing more on executing the work than designing it. After graduating, I started as a project engineer 4 for a national insulation contractor, helping build power plants around the country, including the Intermountain Power Plant in Utah that supplies power to LA. When power plant construction slowed down, the company got into asbestos abatement. We had insulators literally going into plants where they had installed the asbestos insulation and were now taking it off. I was asked if I would be interested in becoming a project estimator and I jumped at the opportunity, as we were inventing our estimating procedures and writing our own estimating program, which was a very elaborate spreadsheet. As the asbestos market started winding down, I moved to a sister company that was doing environmental remediation, including superfund cleanups. I worked on several superfund type projects, including multiple residential remediation projects. At this time, I was working for a contractor managing all the subs doing the reconstruction work. As a result of that work, I was asked to move back to California and oversee a remediation project for the Port of Long Beach. This was the first time in my career that I had been asked to work as an owner’s representative. I figured it would be similar to what I had been doing in directing the work of subs, so I took the job. I found that I liked the work and I think working as a contractor for many years also helped me to look at issues from multiple viewpoints. Since that time, I have worked as a CM on multiple projects for the Port and for California high speed rail. In summary my career path has been: Project Engineer to Estimator to Estimating Manger to Project Manager to Construction Manager representing owners to directing construction managers.