Trends Winter 2019 | Page 30

PERSPECTIVES Ayres hires chief growth officer Wendy Heintz-Joehnk has been named Ayres’ first chief growth officer. Heintz-Joehnk joins Ayres as executive vice president and CGO, bringing 29 years of growth leadership experience in the built environment. Based in our Waukesha, Wisconsin, office, she is one of the four-person executive team setting Ayres’ vision and direction. Her responsibilities include defining strategy for growth across divisions, identifying key hires and firm acquisitions to grow existing or new markets and enter new services, developing new business capture and client maintenance strategies, fostering staff development, and serving as an Ayres ambassador in the business and professional communities. Heintz-Joehnk is a member of the University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee Alumni Board of Trustees and the University’s Athletic Board. She has been engaged in numerous professional and volunteer organizations, including International Women Leading Sustainability; MIT Wisconsin Club; Society of Automotive Engineers; Engineering Society of Detroit; Design Futures Council; Congress for New Urbanism; Society for College and University Planning; Center for Health Design; Sustainability Consortium, SoL (Society of Organizational Learning, MIT); and Milwaukee Metropolitan Association of Commerce. She holds a bachelor’s degree in organizational communication from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and an executive certificate in strategy and innovation from provided permanent repairs to the US 34 corridor along the Big Thompson River near Loveland, Colorado. The highway was damaged during devastating September 2013 flooding. Ayres played a key role in the project, including using hydraulic modeling to guide how and where flood protection would be provided. Based on the project’s service value to the public, the effectiveness of its innovations, and the resulting public safety enhancements, the Colorado Department of Transportation submitted the project for the award. This is the first infrastructure project and the first CDOT project submitted in the 30-year history of CASFM. Engineering News-Record magazine previously awarded its Best of the Best and Project of the Year honors to the project. The Colorado Department of Transportation project was designed by lead firm Jacobs Engineering and subconsultants Ayres, Muller Engineering, RockSol Consulting Group, WSP, and Yeh and Associates. Kiewit Infrastructure Co. was the general contractor. Ayres provided the hydraulic analysis and engineering that guided the early design steps in the project to mitigate the damage caused by the immense destructive forces of the Big Thompson River, whose fury after a 21-inch rain event over a few days in northern Colorado killed eight people and did $2.9 billion in damage, including 23 miles of destruction along US 34, 12 miles of which was virtually erased from the landscape, according to ENR. Development project earns additional honors the MIT Sloan School of Management. Another organization has recognized the transformative Project receives CASFM ‘grand’ award prime consultant serving the City of Altoona, Wisconsin. The Colorado Association of Stormwater and Floodplain Managers (CASFM) added its voice to those praising the results of the US 34 permanent repairs, awarding the project its 2019 Engineering Excellence Grand Award. The project 30 | TRENDS River Prairie development, for which Ayres was the In September, the Wisconsin Economic Development Association presented its Economic Development Initiative Award to the project. WEDA said of the project: “Once undeveloped green space, the site is now a thriving commerce district home to Ingenuity, Integrity, and Intelligence.