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Question:
What do two award-winning ski lodges, a world-class
fitness club, an automotive showroom and service
center, and a water buffalo farm have in common?
Answer: Each moved (or soon will!) from concept to
reality with the help of construction management
professional, Ken Merrow.
Ken’s excellent project and field management skills
are well recognized within Trumbull-Nelson. His
broad understanding of construction has made him an
integral part of the Company’s Project Management
Team over the past year. Prior to becoming a Project
Manager, Ken’s career path has included work as a
carpenter, time keeper, assistant superintendent,
field engineer and site superintendent. His decision
to enter the business 16 years ago was influenced by
family (his father was a construction
superintendent, and many relatives currently
participate in the industry). After high school in
Newport, New Hampshire, he decided to pursue
coursework at Worcester Polytechnic Institute and
obtained a Bachelor of Science Degree in Civil
Engineering.
Commitment to project excellence is a big part of
who Ken is…but he’d be the first to admit that his
real love (after his wife, Rebecca; son, Cody; and
daughter, Hannah) is hunting, hunting and...
hunting. As often as possible. Snowmobiling and
softball fill any recreation voids.
Prior to becoming a Project Manager, Ken’s career
path has included work as a carpenter, time keeper,
assistant superintendent, field engineer and site
superintendent.
Over the years, Ken has participated in a variety of
interesting work. He feels that his most interesting
job as a Project Superintendent was the River Valley
Club. “The amount of materials and products gathered
from all parts of the country was just amazing,” he
suggests. “The job offered numerous challenges, from
site and structural requirements, to detailed finish
work.” In the area of Project Management, his most
interesting job is likely to be one that he is just
starting as this magazine goes off to press: a water
buffalo facility in South Woodstock, Vermont. He
notes that the complex will be “leading edge” in
regards to farming techniques used for these
animals.
Over the years, Ken has been an active participant
in Industry sponsored training programs. He
indicates his personal concern for the Industry’s
apparent inability to attract more young people to
the trades. “When I started, if your dad was a
tradesman, then that’s where you started, so you
could learn to work and respect what your father did
for work,” he says. “Few young kids today have much
respect for a real job.”
In his own way, Ken is serving as an effective role
model to those young people who are giving
construction a try. And he’s certainly gaining the
respect of his T-N peers and associates for the work
he accomplishes. Now, managing those water buffalo!
That we’ll want to hear about!
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