Construction (Heavy Civil / Commercial & Retail)
Civil construction and civil engineering create infrastructure involving anything to do with water, earth, or transportation.
Civil construction is a branch of civil engineering that handles the maintenance, design, and construction of natural and physically built environments.
These environments can include water reservoirs, subdivisions, airports, roads, railways, buildings, bridges, sewer systems, tunnels, and dams.
The civil construction industry comprises individuals, companies, and other interested parties involved in the planning, design, and creation of our infrastructure.
A typical construction job needs to be up to date on the new trends in the civil construction industry and they need to include planning, creating, and maintaining public infrastructure.
This can include:
- Work with governments, clients, and other relevant professionals
- The study, evaluation, and investigation of building sites suitable for the possible creation of infrastructure
- Adhere to the guidelines created by local government, local bodies, and clients when planning, developing and maintaining infrastructure
- Create infrastructure plans and get them approved by governing bodies and local authorities
- Create cost estimates and contracts
- Tender the contracts and hire contractors
- Supervise and monitor the construction of the infrastructure to ensure it matches the plan
we provide different positions in Construction (Heavy Civil / Commercial & Retail)
A Construction Superintendent is responsible for overseeing staff on a construction site and for handling the project’s schedule. Also known as a Construction Foreman. In some instances, a Construction Manager fulfills the role of a Construction Superintendent.
Multi-Family Project Manager The Multi-Family Project Manager will oversee all aspects of the planning, execution, and completion of assigned projects. You will provide leadership to a team, ensuring that everyone stays on schedule and the projects stays within budget.
A condominium (also called a "condo") is a large property complex comprised of individual units, and each unit is owned separately. Ownership usually includes a nonexclusive interest in certain "community property" controlled by the condominium management.
Condominium management is usually made up of a board of unit owners who oversees the daily operation of the complex, such as lawn maintenance and snow removal.
Bridge engineers are civil engineers responsible for designing and building bridges. Put simply, bridge engineers help vehicles and pedestrians cross rivers, valleys, roads, and other obstacles. Bridge engineers ensure that the bridges and roads can support necessary loads without excessive stress or degradation.
n the broadest sense, project managers (PMs) are responsible for planning, organizing, and directing the completion of specific projects for an organization while ensuring these projects are on time, on budget, and within scope.
By overseeing complex projects from inception to completion, project managers have the potential to shape an organization’s trajectory, helping to reduce costs, maximize company efficiencies, and increase revenue.
The exact duties of a project manager will depend on their industry, organization, and the types of projects that a PM is tasked with overseeing. But across the board, all project managers share responsibilities across what’s commonly referred to as the “project life cycle,” which consists of five phases (or processes):
- Initiating
- Planning
- Executing
- Monitoring and Controlling
- Closing
A construction manager is a professional responsible for supervising and directing construction activities in a building project. He or she ensures that the project completes on its time within the allocated budget.
Civil engineers generally work in a variety of locations and conditions. Much of a civil engineer's work is dealing with non-engineers or others from different technical disciplines, so training should give skills preparing future civil engineers in organizational relationships between parties to projects, cost and time. Many spend time outdoors at construction sites so that they can monitor operations or solve problems onsite.