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For Once
in a Construction Lifetime, Women Rule
11/27/2006
By
Joe Florkowski

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Women
run a California library job.
Photo:Joe Florkowski |
Forget about men in yellow hardhats hollering
at women passing by the jobsite at a $40-million library project
in Fontana, California.
The three main principals on the projectthe
architect, construction manager and project manager for the general
contractorare women, and they say they appreciate their unique
situation.
It might be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,
says Joanna Heinrich, senior project manager for San Diego-based
Barnhart Inc., the general contractor.
A net Willingham, who is serving as construction
manager for JCM/HEERY International, agreed: Ive never
been involved in an all-female team. Heinrich and Willingham
will work with architect Kate Diamond, design principal with Los
Angeles-based RNL, to oversee construction on the library.
Fontana, which bills itself as a City
of Innovation, is east of Los Angeles in fast-growing San
Bernardino County.
While it was coincidence that brought three
women together for the library project, their backgrounds spurred
their companies to select them for the job.
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| Diamond,
Willingham and Heinrich at the jobsite in Fontana, Calif. Photo:Joe
Florkowski |
Willingham, for instance, served as construction
manager for 19 libraries in Florida before taking this assignment.
And Heinrich has worked in the construction industry since 1983, starting
as a secretary and making it all the way to project manager. But the
climb was tough, she says. It took me 15 years to get where
some men it would take three or four years maximum, Heinrich
says.
Barnhart is a company that more easily recognizes
the contributions of women and employs many female project engineers,
she says. There is a lot of opportunity at Barnhart, but not
in this industry, she adds.
The experience these women bring will be necessary
on the Fontana library.
Meant to replace an existing, outdated library, the new structure
is a 93,000-sq.-ft., two-story building with a garage. Begun in
February with completion scheduled for spring, 2008, the building
will feature a great hall, rotunda and a Spanish mission design.
The multiple stories and unusual spaces in
a tight site are a challenge. Willingham says its not easy
coordinating the electrical, mechanical and telecommunications systems,
either, because the technology changed as the libraries were built.
We have to make modifications as we go, says Willingham.
The library is being constructed with local
materials and will use energy-efficient lighting and concrete walls
to reduce heat gain, Diamond says. I want this to be better
than any of my memories of a library as a kid, she adds.
Working with women may bring some advantages
over working with male project managers, Willingham says. Female
architects tend to be detail-oriented and more organized,
more fastidious," she says.
And the skills and sheer determination needed
to get ahead in construction can help. When Heinrich was starting
in the construction business, she combined her secretarial skills
with construction know-how. She would take the construction spec
book home with her at night and study it for some projects, she
says.
And when it came time to communicate about
the project or write a letter about its progress, Heinrich would
volunteer for the job.
I knew I wanted to move up, she
says.
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