Steel Construction Vol 40 No 2 - Tubular Steel Feature | Page 12

SAISC PROFILE quite rapidly from the point of view of the software side. I think we’ll be bigger than we are at the moment.We’ll have a different emphasis on the service we provide.We’ll be doing more customising and providing tools to make people more productive for the particular industries that they are in. At the moment people rely on Tekla Structures and any customising or application development they do themselves, and they’re running out of development space and skills. We will provide those skills. People will get a lot more benefit using the software, and we’ll provide that benefit by tailoring the software and providing additional applications.We’ll also have a bigger geographical footprint. Q: What professional accomplishment are you most proud of? A: Along the way, there are different things I’m proud of. At an early stage I wrote some software called XYZ Calc Plus, which at the time was the first 2 and 3 dimensional skeletal analysis program available on PC. I didn’t know that. I thought this technology would be available everywhere. So that was a very proud accomplishment while I was doing my MBA at UCT. Some of buildings I’ve designed and the project teams I’ve worked with have been really great. They’re not iconic structures, but the way the teams came together and the way the guys worked together, under difficult circumstances, and put up some very good structures in a short space of time… I always got a kick out of that. Q: What do you value most about the SAISC? A: I was fortunate enough to attend Hennie de Clerq, Alan Kemp, Rob Young and Spencer Erling’s courses at an early age. I learnt the practical ways of doing things that I’d learnt at university, and I was able to implement that, which was really great. I think the very valuable thing about the SAISC, is that it’s done an amazing job of helping people to do the things they do in the best way possible because of the practical knowledge they gain through the SAISC. It’s an amazing organisation because it’s a collection of professional people who work for the institute as well as professionals and others who are brought in from outside. They provide an interesting mix of courses, meetings, input and it really just makes it work. This business that we’re in, CADEX SA, started from a chance visit. The SAISC brought a chap out, Fikri Garres from the UK. Fikri had been building a standard so that organisations could exchange information in the UK called the CIS2 Standard. After the talk I had a chat to Fikri, and he put me on to a couple of guys around the world, including eventually Andre Cronje from France. Andre told me what they did and what software they could provide, got us trained and eventually came to us and said get out there and sell this stuff to other guys, the country needs it! And that’s how CADEX SA got started. It started from an initiative of the Institute of Steel Construction. I don’t think they thought about that. They just had this interesting speaker that they brought out, but for us – it opened up a whole industry, the steel detailing industry. That is the power that the Institute of Steel Construction has. 10 Steel Construction Vol. 40 No. 2 2016 Top: 2015 Steel Awards Photo Competition, Sponsored by CADEX SA. above: Launch of the Association of Structural Detailers (ASSD). Q: What do you value most about the Steel Awards? A: The thing I value most about the Steel Awards is that it gives people the ability to showcase what they’ve done. Its extraordinary what you find at the Steel Awards.You often expect that the really big jobs will be done by the really big guys and that’s not the case.You sometimes expect that certain guys do certain types of work and suddenly you find they do other types of work that you didn’t even know about. You get companies that you believe may be mediocre, you have this perception of them, and suddenly they pop up with this amazing structure they’re involved with, with a fantastic record of how it was developed and built. I think it lifts everybody’s skills as well. It makes people realise that they’ve got to market the projects and structures that they do, and I think because it’s a competitive environment – people do better. I think the industry is in a better space because of the steel awards than they would be without it. Q: What do you think the biggest opportunity is facing our industry at the moment? A: We have talented people in the industry of all ages. I think we’re well positioned from that point of view. There’s an under-utilisation of technology, and I think that will change – which is an opportunity for the industry. The work will come back. The challenge is getting into Africa and being broader than we are at the moment… also a big opportunity. There some bright young people and some very dedicated people at the universities and training colleges. Some great people that are dedicated to keeping this industry going and growing it, which I think is very encouraging.We didn’t have that 10 or 15 years ago.We had a lack of young people in the industry. Now that we have them, the challenge is getting the older guys to share their knowledge with them and to position them much better for the future.We will do well. I’ve no doubt about that.