The Civil Engineering Contractor June 2019 | Page 35

trucks couldn’t reach the school. People also had serious struggles to access their homes and amenities like clinics. When the project was complete, you could drive the distance in less than 10 minutes. I will always remember that project for the meaningful difference it made in the lives of local people. Recently we opened the Gateway in the Umhlanga area. It is a majestic, four-level interchange project, with amazing routing and isolation of traffic to promote and facilitate rapid movement in a node in KwaZulu- Natal that is growing at a fast pace. The N2 Wild Coast is the last remaining missing link in our key corridors in the country. Completing that section is going to open up the corridor of the N2 from Ermelo, Mpumalanga all the way to Cape Town. Many people currently avoid that route because of the Eastern Cape’s steep inclines and rough terrain. The new corridor has a much flatter alignment and, being straighter, will cut more than 100km from the trip. It will create trade opportunities between the Eastern Cape, KwaZulu- Natal and the Western Cape. CEC: How has the industry evolved since you entered it? SK: South Africa has always played along with the big boys. The infrastructure we deliver shows that we’ve got excellent engineering capability. We deliver infrastructure that is comparable to any in the world. The e-toll scheme we’ve delivered, for example, is an amazing piece of infrastructure the potential of which we haven’t even tapped. With e-tolls we can solve many problems – we can supply information to police and SARS, for example. About 2.5 million vehicles go through our highways every month providing data we could offer to other authorities. The resulting large amounts of data can be used for planning purposes, for advanced traffic management and be put to good use to improve the work of civil engineering. www.civilsonline.co.za PROFILE SANRAL is one of the highest profile brands in South Africa. Where we’ve experienced challenges is in transforming the industry, as well as welcoming young engineers to take over from the older generation of traditionally white engineers, who are about to retire. There’s a flood of young engineers who need to be mentored and routed through the hoops to become professional engineers. Between these two demographics there’s a big gap that’s being filled by foreign multinationals, which taken have over local consulting firms. Local industry capability to head up a project is hard to find. Many large South African construction companies are struggling or in liquidation in the current economic environment as our industry is consequently being decimated. When the cycle turns, there is a risk we may not have construction capability and multinationals will have to step in. We’re working with the industry to see how it can be rescued. On the other hand, black players are complaining they don’t have access to work. Sadly, there’s a proliferation of grade 1s and 2s, which isn’t helpful because at grade 8 and 9 you have a small number. Emerging small businesses are not sustainable on their own to tender for big jobs: they need to come together. CEC: What is your message to new civil engineering graduates? SK: It’s about motivating and inspiring young ones coming up, the ability to have bravery to chase objectives that they might otherwise run from, but which helps you to aim higher. My message is: be clear about where you want to end up; be clear about your journey and chase it and hound people and learn. Don’t be afraid to ask questions. The most important thing is share what you know, because if you share people get comfortable with you and reciprocate. nn CEC June 2019 | 33