Jun 06, 2007
Belt Collins made a series of new hires.
Adam Lee is a civil and environmental engineer. Lee was with Tighe & Bond in Massachusetts. His projects include Paradise Memorial Park in Honolulu and a U.S. Naval Air Force Base in Atsugi, Japan.
Adrian Mata is a CAD technician and IT specialist. Mata supports engineering staff in computer-aided design.
Zachary Gray is a project manager in civil engineering. He was with KPFF. Projects include Paradise Memorial Park in Honolulu and the Kahu'aina subdivision in Kauii, both in Hawaii.
Greg Kistner is a design engineer for the civil engineering practice. Kistner was with SvR Design. Projects include Hokulia residential community in Hawaii and Dodson Ranch, a 400-acre community, in Ephrata. He is leading the firm's training program in Civil 3D for AutoCAD.
Stuart Silk Architects hired
John Adams to lead a new division called Stuart Silk Architects Commercial Studio. Adams worked with Fredric Schwartz Architects in New York on projects for Washington Mutual Bank and helped design the Whitehall Staten Island Ferry Terminal in Manhattan. In Seattle, he worked on Brouwers Cafe in Fremont, Zum Fitness Club and the Duvall Community Youth Center.
Sparling hired
Aimee Kimball and
Semir Halilovic as electrical project designers,
Tisa Seely as administrative manager and
Casey Hackett as accounting specialist. Kimball brings four years of electrical design experience to Sparling. She is working on the design team for the new Starbucks 505 First Ave. S. office project. Halilovic is a 2006 electrical engineering graduate of the University of Washington. He is working on a new corporate campus for a technology firm in Redmond. Seely brings over 10 years of management experience and manages administrative staff in the Seattle, Lynnwood and Portland offices. Hackett has 20 years experience in the construction industry on the accounting side, most recently in purchasing.
Herrera Environmental Consultants added
Tyson Wright to the firm as civil engineer. Wright worked for CRW Engineering Group in Anchorage. He specializes in infrastructure design for water, sewer and storm drain systems, roadways and site design. Wright's projects include the King County Cedar Hills Regional Landfill Area Six Closure, the Hoh River Boundary Pond Enhancement project for the U.S. Forest Service and two low-impact development projects for private developers.
Studio Meng Strazzara added
Jennifer Jackson as architect and
Brandon Moggio and
Jen Bushnell as intern architects. Jackson is LEED-accredited and worked in Atlanta. Projects include the Daniel J. Evans Building Phase II Modernization at The Evergreen State College. Moggio was with A3C Collaborative Architecture in Michigan. He has eight years experience and will be part of the Northshore School District's new transportation facility design team. Bushnell has 10 years experience in architecture and construction. She joins the Central Washington University Nicholson Pavilion Phase III and Frost Elementary design team.
Art Anderson Associates hired six new employees. They are
Bill Higgins,
Ed Cuaron,
Greg Jennings,
Todd Allen,
Tinisha Rockiett and
Zach Wonderly. Higgins is an electrical engineer with 40 years experience who worked with Art Anderson from 1980 to 1997. Cuaron is technical assistant to the company's facilities division. He was with DePaul Industries and provided support to the Public Works Engineering Department Kitsap-Bremerton. Greg Jennings is a naval architect with a background in military and high-speed vessel design. He worked at the Computer Sciences Corp.'s Advanced Marine Center. Allen, part of the Extra Nautical Mile internship program, is a senior ocean engineering major at the Florida Institute of Technology, where he has worked in naval architecture and underwater technology. He has also worked for a multi-year research initiative on an underwater autonomous vehicle that grew from his senior design project. Rockiett is a senior at Bremerton High School and will be participating in the Office Occupations Program at Olympic College in the fall. Wonderly is a drafter and modeler with experience in AutoCAD and Rhinoceros. He is a student at Olympic College, where he is pursuing an engineering degree.
Integrus Architecture promoted several staff to associates:
Rebecca Baibak,
Robert Graper,
Tim Graybeal,
Jen-Yuang Hong and
Jim Petrich. Baibak is a LEED-accredited project manager whose recent clients include Lake Washington, Bellevue and Microsoft. Graper is a structural project engineer whose 22-year career includes K-12, higher education, medical, justice and U.S. embassy projects. Recent projects include the new Site 52 Elementary for the Lake Washington School District and Gig Harbor's Healthcare Center for the Washington Corrections Center for Women. Graybeal is a structural project engineer whose experience includes K-12, higher education, justice and civic projects. Recent projects include the Spokane Convention Center and Eastside Catholic High School. Hong is a LEED-accredited architectural designer who is focused on K-12, higher education and justice projects. Recent projects include the District Services Center for the Edmonds School District and the Intensive Management Unit for the Monroe Correctional Complex. Petrich is a LEED-accredited project manager whose 21-year career includes education, justice, commercial, industrial, corporate and retail projects. Recent projects include the District Services Center for the Edmonds School District and the Henry M. Jackson Federal Building Upgrades.
Kennedy/Jenks Consultants in San Diego hired
Harold Glaser as director of the Water Environment Group. Glaser has 29 years of experience in planning, design, construction and consulting on water and water resources. He has worked with the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California for Los Angeles, the Department of Water and Power in San Diego and the San Diego County Water Authority.