gendna2
Civil/Environmental
- Jun 15, 2013
- 33
Hello bridge engineers,
BLUF: Take a field bridge maintenance/construction job with a Class I railroad; or try to get a job with a design consulting firms?
What do you think as bridge engineers?
/
Me: PE, will have MS in structural engineering Tier I school (not being pretentious, just saying), field experience (but not bridges or R.R.), no design experience. Want to do bridge design, or structural design; that is why I am struggling to get the MS.
Wish I could do field work, and hard core design; but in 2016 this is impossible. Can do lots of traveling, can manage blue collar labor, can sit in a cubicle and design, don't care about location, realize I am getting too old to switch careers tracks again. Care about job security, sometimes wonder if chasing the "design" dream is not worth it long term, definitely would pick Class I R.R. if company culture and company overall was the only deciding factor.
I see the country (US) as going overall downhill, not optimistic about the future. I have a family, so that certainly is a factor pulling me in the RR direction. Maybe I'm too pessimistic, I don't know.
/
Design Firm: Pros - Actually use my engineering knowledge to fullest extent; squeeze the most knowledge out of my PE and MS; my dream is to design.
Cons - Hire and fire culture, low job security, "real stress", i.e. real deadlines that lead to you getting fired if not complete, billable hours...in a nutshell, capitalism, haha.
/
Class I R.R.: Pros - Rock solid job security, amazing benefits, amazing pension; basically like working for the government but in the private sector...with greater demands as well, of course. Really like the culture of the company, the history, and it fits my previous job experience very well. Doesn't seem to be "real stress", i.e. I doubt they'll quickly fire you if you slightly under-perform. Also, if business goes down, management, and their engineer management are some of the last to be fired.
Seems like a "goose that laid the golden egg" kind of job. They hardly hire any managers proportional to the size of their company.
Cons - First 2-5 years are in the field, i.e. no design experience. Been there, done that, as far as construction management goes...it's not engineering (no offense to CMs, just cutting to the chase). I went back to school to be a "real" engineer.
After 2-5 years you may get a job in the in-house design office. No real hard core design is performed. Just manage design consultants and check them (how you can really do that with minimal design experience is hard to tell), i.e. project management.
In house only does limited design, and that is only the easiest, cookie cutter bridges. All the cons have been verified.
FYI, in house design engineers I talked to all transitioned from private consulting firms to R.R. and did not come from the field. Seems like a trend and I suspect it has to do with their ability to actually perform design work and therefore actually check the consultants. Once they got into the R.R., of course, they stuck to it...the benefits are hard to beat.
Finally, I pick RR, I close the chapter on ever being a real "structural" or "bridge engineer". I'm too old to go back to the design side, and I would never leave the company bar something catastrophic. My previous job was rough and I highly doubt even the RR can beat that...so I can handle corporate, blue collar, whatever bulls*** comes up.
Please let me know what you all think.
BLUF: Take a field bridge maintenance/construction job with a Class I railroad; or try to get a job with a design consulting firms?
What do you think as bridge engineers?
/
Me: PE, will have MS in structural engineering Tier I school (not being pretentious, just saying), field experience (but not bridges or R.R.), no design experience. Want to do bridge design, or structural design; that is why I am struggling to get the MS.
Wish I could do field work, and hard core design; but in 2016 this is impossible. Can do lots of traveling, can manage blue collar labor, can sit in a cubicle and design, don't care about location, realize I am getting too old to switch careers tracks again. Care about job security, sometimes wonder if chasing the "design" dream is not worth it long term, definitely would pick Class I R.R. if company culture and company overall was the only deciding factor.
I see the country (US) as going overall downhill, not optimistic about the future. I have a family, so that certainly is a factor pulling me in the RR direction. Maybe I'm too pessimistic, I don't know.
/
Design Firm: Pros - Actually use my engineering knowledge to fullest extent; squeeze the most knowledge out of my PE and MS; my dream is to design.
Cons - Hire and fire culture, low job security, "real stress", i.e. real deadlines that lead to you getting fired if not complete, billable hours...in a nutshell, capitalism, haha.
/
Class I R.R.: Pros - Rock solid job security, amazing benefits, amazing pension; basically like working for the government but in the private sector...with greater demands as well, of course. Really like the culture of the company, the history, and it fits my previous job experience very well. Doesn't seem to be "real stress", i.e. I doubt they'll quickly fire you if you slightly under-perform. Also, if business goes down, management, and their engineer management are some of the last to be fired.
Seems like a "goose that laid the golden egg" kind of job. They hardly hire any managers proportional to the size of their company.
Cons - First 2-5 years are in the field, i.e. no design experience. Been there, done that, as far as construction management goes...it's not engineering (no offense to CMs, just cutting to the chase). I went back to school to be a "real" engineer.
After 2-5 years you may get a job in the in-house design office. No real hard core design is performed. Just manage design consultants and check them (how you can really do that with minimal design experience is hard to tell), i.e. project management.
In house only does limited design, and that is only the easiest, cookie cutter bridges. All the cons have been verified.
FYI, in house design engineers I talked to all transitioned from private consulting firms to R.R. and did not come from the field. Seems like a trend and I suspect it has to do with their ability to actually perform design work and therefore actually check the consultants. Once they got into the R.R., of course, they stuck to it...the benefits are hard to beat.
Finally, I pick RR, I close the chapter on ever being a real "structural" or "bridge engineer". I'm too old to go back to the design side, and I would never leave the company bar something catastrophic. My previous job was rough and I highly doubt even the RR can beat that...so I can handle corporate, blue collar, whatever bulls*** comes up.
Please let me know what you all think.