Beca wins top NZ Engineering Excellence Awards
25/11/2010
For immediate release
Beca wins top NZ Engineering Excellence Awards
Beca took out three awards at the NZ Engineering Excellence Awards presented in Wellington last night.
Matthew Lander: Young Engineer of the Year
Matthew Lander, Beca Associate in Structural Engineering, was named Young Engineer of the Year.
This highly competitive award recognises an engineer who has demonstrated a commitment to innovation in engineering.
Matthew joined Beca in 2005 and holds a Master of Engineering (Civil) from the University of Canterbury. He has been involved in a number of innovative projects, the most significant of which is the BNZ Building project.
The BNZ Building, located at CentrePort’s Quays development in Wellington, consists of three 6-storey towers or ‘piers’, interconnected by pedestrian bridges spanning full-height atria. It was constructed on reclaimed, vibro-improved land. This building was a finalist in the Building and Construction category of the awards.
Matthew was the structural engineering manager for this project, and was responsible for the design and construction monitoring.
NZi3: Winner Sustainability and Clean Technology category
NZi3 (the New Zealand ICT Innovation Institute) is based at the University of Canterbury campus in Christchurch, and has been designed primarily as a research and innovation centre.
Set an ambitious brief by client the University of Canterbury, the consulting team of Warren and Mahoney and Beca took a collaborative approach, with a high level of integration between architecture, structure, and environmental engineering.
Beca adopted a whole building engineering approach to the building, integrating architectural elements into the environmental control concept to offer improvements in performance, adaptability, and life cycle value.
NZi3 has received a number of accolades, including a category award win earlier this month in the UK based IStructE awards.
SLN Shaking Baghouse: Winner Chemical Bioprocess and Food category
This Beca AMEC study was part of a number of environmental improvement projects at SLN’s Doniambo nickel smelter in New Caledonia.
One part of Beca’s involvement was to research options for cleaning off-gases from the ferronickel desulphurization shaking stations. The Beca AMEC team engineered a baghouse system that required no special heat transfer equipment and no dilution air, which prevented the implementation of a more expensive electrostatic precipitator and simplified the operational and maintenance demands on the client.
Other
Beca finalists in project categories:
BNZ Building,
Wellington
Beca and Tonkin & Taylor
Naval Fuel
Installation
Beca, Fitzroy Engineering Ltd and the New
Zealand Defence Force
Auckland Motorways, Ramp
Signalling
Beca, NZ Transport Agency and Transfield
Services Ltd
About Beca
Established
in New Zealand in 1918, Beca employs 2500 staff in 21
offices across the Asia-Pacific region, centred around hubs
in Auckland, Melbourne and Singapore.
Beca engineers,
planners and project managers have played a major part in a
wide variety of New Zealand infrastructure projects,
including Auckland’s Sky Tower, The Rock at Wellington
Airport, Christchurch Southern Motorway, and Tauranga’s
new harbour
bridge.
Ends