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ASCE Plot Points Podcast

American Society of Civil Engineerswww.asce.org
ASCE's News and Information Hub

Episodes

Episode 146: Jordan Kubenik, on turning student success into a career springboard

The 2023 ASCE Architectural Engineering Institute International Student Design Competition challenged student teams to consider a real building – the five-story Kaleideum North in Winston-Salem, North Carolina – and innovatively design it as a living building as it is retrofit into a new children’s museum. This includes all kinds of considerations – including green design elements, energy performance optimization, and embodied carbon reduction. And this year, the multidisplinary team from Penn S...

Jul 17, 202311 minEp. 146

Episode 145: Jose Abinazar, on his not-so-simple civil engineering journey

It’s another week of work for Jose Abinazar, a project designer for Gannett Fleming in Miami, Florida. But the journey to get to this work week wasn’t so simple. His civil engineering college experience in Venezuela was interrupted; his family fled political turmoil and moved to Miami; Jose had to learn a new language, find a job, find a new school, and start all over again. But he made it work. In episode 145 of ASCE Plot Points, Abinazar reflects on his civil engineering story and why he won’t...

Jun 19, 202321 minEp. 145

Episode 144: Eric Steward, on that time he promised to get a concrete canoe tattoo

With the first ASCE Civil Engineering Student Championships approaching this weekend, June 10-12 at the University of Wisconsin–Platteville, there is an interesting drama playing out with the University of South Alabama concrete canoe team. Longtime faculty adviser for the South Alabama ASCE student chapter Eric Steward, Ph.D., P.E., M.ASCE, made a promise to his students a decade ago. If a South Alabama student team ever advanced to a Society-wide competition, he said, he’d commemorate the acco...

Jun 06, 202315 minEp. 144

Episode 143: Christopher Seigel, on if civil engineers really can do their jobs from home

As noted in a recent Civil Engineering magazine article, the civil engineering industry is still sorting out whether work-from-home arrangements established at the outset of the COVID pandemic remain viable as life moves forward into something like normalcy. For Christopher Seigel, a civil engineer with Sci-Tek Consultants in Philadelphia, working from home has been a net positive. In episode 143 of ASCE Plot Points, Seigel discusses all angles of working from home for civil engineers and why he...

May 22, 202313 minEp. 143

Episode 142: Student Sessions – Alysha Curtis, Peter Yu, and Evan Brittenham, on life as a civil engineering student

This week’s episode of the ASCE Plot Points podcast is the first of what we’re calling Student Sessions. Three ASCE student ambassadors – Alysha Curtis of Fresno State, Peter Yu of the University of Washington, and Evan Brittenham of Western Kentucky University – talk about what thrills them and what intimidates them as they get ready to trade the grad cap for a hardhat.

May 02, 202321 minEp. 142

Episode 141: Vanessa Eslava, on the fastest-rising city for civil engineers

ASCE has been publishing its Best Places to Be a Civil Engineer rankings for four years now, based on a combination of salary data, civil engineering job opportunities, and cost of living. And over that span, the city that has risen the most up the list might surprise you. It’s a city known for its climate, its beaches, and now its civil engineering. It’s San Diego, California, and in episode 141 of ASCE Plot Points, Vanessa Eslava, A.M.ASCE, a transportation engineer for T.Y. Lin, talks about w...

Apr 18, 202311 minEp. 141

Episode 140: Dimitrios Athanasiou, on the theoretical vs. the applied

Dimitrios Athanasiou, Ph.D., E.I.T., A.M.ASCE, is a senior associate of environmental and earth sciences at Exponent in Bellevue, Washington; he has a Ph.D. from Texas Tech in civil engineering; and he’s the co-chair of the ASCE EWRI Seattle Chapter. But he began his education with a bachelor’s degree back home in Greece in physics. So he has an interesting perspective on any comparison between the theoretical and the applied. In episode 140 of ASCE Plot Points, Athanasiou talks with guest hosts...

Mar 27, 202312 minEp. 140

Episode 139: Kevin Brown, on becoming the teacher you wish you’d had

Kevin Brown, P.E., M.ASCE, is a construction services manager at TranSystems in Philadelphia and an adjunct professor at the College of New Jersey. And as he’s entered into the leadership phase of his career, he’s approaching these opportunities with generosity and thoughtfulness. In episode 139 of ASCE Plot Points, Brown outlines his journey from student to teacher and talks about how he's trying to fill gaps for the next generation of civil engineers.

Mar 14, 202325 minEp. 139

Episode 138: Sarah Matin, on maximizing the IIJA moment

Infrastructure advocacy takes center stage this week with the ASCE Legislative Fly-In in Washington, D.C. Sarah Matin, P.E., M.ASCE, Orlando office principal for S&ME and chair of the ASCE Public Policy and Practice Committee, is one of the many ASCE members headed to Capitol Hill this week looking to keep the IIJA momentum going. In episode 138 of ASCE Plot Points, Matin talks about how IIJA funding is affecting work going on in Florida and what’s next for infrastructure advocacy....

Feb 28, 202315 minEp. 138

Episode 137: Jaffer Almosawy, ASCE’s Minister of Love

You never know how those engineering skills you develop in your career might translate in other areas of your life. Case in point: Jaffer Almosawy, P.E., ENV SP, M.ASCE. He’s a project manager for GCW Inc. in Las Vegas, specializing in water and wastewater design. But recently, he’s also become known as ASCE’s Minister of Love. What exactly does that mean? In this special Valentine’s Day episode of ASCE Plot Points, Almosawy explains.

Feb 14, 20239 minEp. 137

Episode 136: Jennifer Sloan Ziegler, on quiet quitting

Issues of workforce dominate the conversation around civil engineering in 2023. And one of latest workforce trends is the notion of quiet quitting. Jennifer Sloan Ziegler, Ph.D., P.E., M.ASCE, is an engineer and project manager for Cypress Environment and Infrastructure in Jackson, Mississippi, and an ASCE Region 5 governor. In episode 136 of ASCE Plot Points, Ziegler talks about quiet quitting and why she thinks it might be an essential strategy for the modern civil engineer.

Jan 31, 202315 minEp. 136

Episode 135: Antoinette Quagliata, on how sustainability became the norm

Sustainability has come a long way over the course of Antoinette Quagliata's career – from project add-ons to default requirements. A ​manager of sustainability services for Dewberry, Quagliata, ENV SP, talks on episode 135 of the ASCE Plot Points podcast about the changes she's seen and how current sustainability tools are making her work better than ever.

Jan 10, 202314 minEp. 135

Episode 134: Brian Brenner, on viewing your work with childlike wonder

Brian Brenner, P.E., F.ASCE, is a professor of the practice at Tufts University and a principal engineer with Tighe & Bond in Westwood, Massachusetts. He’s published three collections of essays through ASCE, and he has a new monthly column, “More Water Under the Bridge,” on Civil Engineering Source. Remarkably, all these accomplishments – the teaching, the work, the writing – springs from the mind of a 4-year-old. Well, that is to say, Brenner fell in love with bridges as a toddler has managed t...

Dec 06, 202217 minEp. 134

Episode 133: Michel Bruneau, on the blessing of disaster, Part 2

Michel Bruneau, Ph.D., P.E., P.Eng, F.SEI, Dist.M.ASCE, returns to the ASCE Plot Points podcast to discuss his new book, "The Blessings of Disaster." In part one, he argued why learning from extreme weather events and other disasters is essential. In part two, he outlines how such learning can be done.

Nov 22, 202214 minEp. 133

Episode 132: Michel Bruneau, on the blessings of disaster, Part 1

Michel Bruneau, Ph.D., P.E., P.Eng, F.SEI, Dist.M.ASCE, has a new book out today, “ The Blessings of Disaster ,” that argues the best way forward – if not the only way – is by learning from the extreme weather events and other disasters that beset us. In episode 132 of ASCE Plot Points, Bruneau discusses his new book, the “Three Little Pigs” fable, and why we must find blessings in disasters....

Nov 08, 202217 minEp. 132

Episode 131: Jason Korb, on building up to the challenge

The ASCENT Tower in Milwaukee – at 25 stories – is the world’s tallest timber building. In episode 131 of ASCE Plot Points, the architect behind the ASCENT, Jason Korb of Korb and Associates, talks about the unique challenges inherent to the ASCENT and how collaboration and innovation helped make history possible.

Oct 25, 202211 minEp. 131

Episode 130: Duncan Wardle, on innovation on demand

Duncan Wardle, former head of innovation and creativity at Walt Disney Company, will serve as the closing speaker at the ASCE 2022 Convention, Oct. 26 in Anaheim, California. In episode 130 of ASCE Plot Points, Wardle talks about innovation and how to do it.

Oct 11, 202212 minEp. 130

Episode 129: Colette Easter, on why resilience starts with awareness

Colette Easter is not a native Kentuckian. But she’s lived and worked there a long time now, and she cares about the state. An engineer with the Metropolitan Sewer District in Louisville, she played a huge leadership role in the 2019 ASCE state infrastructure report card for Kentucky. So when floods tore through parts of Eastern Kentucky this summer, it spoke to Easter both professionally and personally. In episode 129 of ASCE Plot Points, Easter talks about the work she’s doing in Louisville to...

Sep 27, 202213 minEp. 129

Episode 128: Sarah McEwen and Shawn Miller, on the water crisis in Jackson

Sarah McEwen has worked as a water resources engineer in Jackson, Mississippi, for nearly a decade. Shawn Miller, entering his senior year as a civil engineering student at Jackson State University, has called the city home his entire life. In episode 128 of ASCE Plot Points, the two ASCE leaders share stories from the recent water crisis as the city seeks a pathway toward resilience.

Sep 13, 202214 minEp. 128

Episode 127: Stu Walesh, on adopting a growth mindset

Stu Walesh is an ASCE distinguished member; a longtime civil engineer specializing in water with experience in the public sector, the private sector, and academia. Through it all, he's approached every day as a chance to learn something new. In episode 127 of ASCE Plot Points, Walesh talks about how he developed that growth mindset and how it helps create positive disruption.

Aug 30, 202214 minEp. 127

Episode 126: Melissa Hilsabeck, on arriving at your destination job

Every career journey has stops along the way. And for many people, those are just called jobs. But for the lucky among us, those stops along the way eventually add up to a destination job. But for Melissa Hilsabeck, EIT, A.M.ASCE, she’s found that destination job very early in her career. She’s a capital projects coordinator in the construction management division for the Port of Long Beach. On episode 126 of the ASCE Plot Points podcast, Hilsabeck talks about her career journey and the many exc...

Aug 16, 202218 minEp. 126

Episode 125: Bentley Ruggles, on bringing projects to life with VR

These days it takes a lot of different people with a lot of different skills to make civil engineering happen. It really comes down to teamwork and technology. On episode 125 of the ASCE Plot Points podcast, Bentley Ruggles, a senior project manager for Dewberry, talks about how virtual reality technology is changing the way projects get done.

Aug 02, 202216 minEp. 125

Episode 124: Mehrnaz Doustmohammadi and Michael Anderson, on a new way to do public transportation

Efficiency is essential these days. There isn’t enough time or money for anything less. And efficiency is borne of innovation. The Office of Public Transportation in Alabama is one such innovation – a partnership between the state department of transportation and the University of Alabama in Huntsville with the simple goal of improving transit for the citizens of Alabama. In episode 124 of ASCE Plot Points, two Alabama Office of Public Transporation leaders, Mehrnaz Doustmohammadi and Michael An...

Jul 19, 202216 minEp. 124

Episode 123: Joel Figueroa-Vallines, on the Surfside tragedy a year later

Joel Figueroa-Vallines, P.E., F.ASCE, is a structural and forensic engineer and president of SEP+A Engineering Consulting, headquartered in Orlando. He left home to drive south for Surfside, Florida, last summer in the aftermath of the tragic collapse of the Champlain Towers South condominium. He wound up staying for three weeks, helping where he could. In episode 123 of ASCE Plot Points, Figueroa-Vallines reflects on the tragedy a year later and how he’s seen it change the industry....

Jul 12, 202217 minEp. 123

Episode 122: Danny Rotter, on how scenario planning will ensure our clean water future

Big-picture thinking, long-term planning - they seem to be at a premium these days. But not in Reno, Nevada. Not when it comes to clean water. Danny Rotter is an engineering manager for the Truckee Meadows Water Authority in Reno, and he works as part of a team that is using scenario planning and detailed data analysis to ensure the region's clean water future all the way out to the year 2100. On episode 122 of the ASCE Plot Points, Rotter talks about how that process works and why it's so impor...

Jun 21, 202215 minEp. 122

Episode 121: Sam Potts, on the benefits of the medium-sized firm

Civil engineering careers can take many shapes. You can work for a giant firm. You can work for a smaller firm. But what about those medium-sized firms? On episode 121 of the ASCE Plot Points, Sam Potts, a transportation engineer in Los Angeles, California, details the benefits of working for a medium-sized firm.

Jun 14, 202215 minEp. 121

Episode 120: Marsia Geldert-Murphey, on the near-death experience that only made her stronger

Society members recently voted Marsia Geldert Murphey as the ASCE 2023 president-elect. Clearly, her accomplishments and vision for the organization spoke volumes. But what many members might not know is that six years ago, Geldert-Murphey wasn’t running for ASCE office; she was just hoping to get out of bed, after an accident left her in a coma. In episode 120 of the ASCE Plot Points podcast, Geldert-Murphey reflects on how that accident changed her life and her journey into ASCE leadership....

Jun 07, 202214 minEp. 120

Episode 119: Ryan Carrusca and Natalia Hoeppner, on the 2022 concrete canoe competition

The ASCE Society-wide concrete canoe competition returns this weekend for the first time since 2019 – June 3-5 at Louisiana Tech University. In episode 119 of the ASCE Plot Points podcast, two senior project leads – Ryan Carrusca and Natalia Hoeppner or the University of British Columbia and Lipscomb University respectively – talk about their teams’ journeys and hopes for the competition.

May 31, 202212 minEp. 119

Episode 118: Doug Taylor, on civil engineers and wildfire resilience

May is National Wildfire Awareness Month. Doug Taylor knows. The former president of both the ASCE San Francisco Section and Fresno Branch spent six years as the Region 9 disaster preparedness chair. He's helped get civil engineers trained and certified to serve as site inspectors in the aftermath of wildfires. In episode 118 of the ASCE Plot Points podcast, Taylor talks about how wildfires continue to affect his homestate of California and what civil engineers can do to help....

May 24, 202213 minEp. 118

Episode 117: Holly Piza, on advancing your career in water resources

Holly Piza, P.E., M.ASCE, is the research and development director at Mile High Flood District in Denver and the 2022 president of ASCE’s Environmental and Water Resources Institute. In episode of 117 of the ASCE Plot Points podcast, Piza talks with guest hosts Brianne Duncan and Wendy Cohen of the EWRI Environmental Health and Water Quality Committee about her career path.

May 17, 202217 minEp. 117