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Harry Mashburn Brings Design-Build Experience
to National Presidency
South Carolina contractor wants to
improve the industry's image and incorporate builders as owners'
advocates earlier in the construction process
By Mark Shaw
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Harry Mashburn's firm, Mashburn Construction,
Columbia, S.C., has been a Carolinas AGC member for 25-plus
years, and Mashburn himself served as president of the
Carolinas chapter in 1994 before he began working on national
committees.
(photo ©george fulton photography) |
One of South Carolina's most savvy design-builders
made his debut in March as the 2006 president of the Associated
General Contractors of America.
Harry Mashburn, founder and president
of Mashburn Construction Co. of Columbia, S.C., took the reins
as national president at the association's annual convention
in Palm Springs, Calif. Mashburn will work on a theme of "contractors
as the owners' advocate" in encouraging his AGC colleagues
to work more closely with project owners to get all parties
involved earlier in the construction process.
"Early collaboration is the key
to a project's success," Mashburn says. "That includes
major vendors too. Architects and engineers need to design
according to the capability of the materials, and they need
to know about that up front. It means establishing a new type
of relationship among all parties involved in a project."
As part of his integration initiative,
Mashburn has pushed AGC to step up its joint activities with
the Construction Users Roundtable and other owners' groups
and find ways to more fully integrate contractors into the
construction process.
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Jane Andrews, Mashburn's vice president
of administration, has been with the company for more
than 30 years.
(photo ©george fulton photography) |
"We want owners to look to the construction
industry, and specifically, contractors, as professionals
who are a vital part of the whole process, not just a commodity,"
he says. "It is getting better, but it could be improved."
Mashburn also sees a strong need to educate
the industry about new project delivery options. "The
old design-bid-build mentality is still ingrained in many
organizations," he says. "That has got to change.
It's hard to finance, and it's hard to defend from a product
standpoint. I don't know exactly what the long-term solution
to that is, but it's going to involve time and money."
Mashburn will also encourage the establishment
of a blueprint for the future of product development at AGC.
"We need more research about product development strategy,
perhaps even a task force to look at that," he says.
He also sees AGC expanding its role in developing guidelines
for building information modeling and the contract documents
that cover it.
Mashburn's larger industry priorities
include expanding the industry's skilled labor force. "The
average age of construction superintendents in the U.S. is
49, and we're going to need around 200,000 workers a year
just to keep up with coming retirements and new demand,"
he says. But the industry's image needs work before that will
happen, he adds. "We have a horrible image, the job of
last resort, and we've got to invest heavily in changing that."
On the immigration issue, Mashburn says:
"It's not only good to learn Spanish these days, it's
nearly essential to what we do. We must find a way of making
[immigrants] legal workers in some fashion. They are excellent
workers and craftsmen, and we couldn't run our jobsites without
them."
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Harry Mashburn
President/CEO
Mashburn Construction Co. Inc.
Columbia, S.C.
Founded in 1976 by Harry Mashburn
Building general contractor specializing in health care,
office, retail and renovation projects
$60-80 million annual volume
Client geography
Mostly the Carolinas
Age: 63
Born in Elizabeth, N.J., 1942
Raised in Philadelphia
Married to Betsy for 43 years
Children: Lee, 36; Paul, 39; Pat, 41; 7 grandchildren
Church
Kathwood Baptist Church, Columbia, S.C.
Education
B.S. (1964) Civil Engineering, North Carolina State
University
Military Service:
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 2 years
Activities;
Golf ("I'm not good enough to be upset with my
game."), travel, fly fishing, theater, chamber
music
Best Vacations:
Warm, sunny beaches; Italy, Spain, England
American Bar Association:
Member, Litigation Section, Construction Industry Forum
Books:
Mostly nonfiction-biographies, history ("Real people's
lives are more interesting than made-up stories.")
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Industry Leadership
Mashburn brings to the presidency a long pedigree of AGC
service and leadership.
His firm has been a Carolinas AGC member for 25-plus years,
and Mashburn himself served as president of the Carolinas
chapter in 1994 before he began working on national committees
and task forces.
"Harry has always been a deliberate and listener-focused
leader," says Steve Gennett, president and CEO of the
Carolinas AGC. "He senses the real direction of an issue,
summarizes the expectations of a group and helps reach a solid
consensus. He has served us very well."
On his way to the national presidency, Mashburn has chaired
the Building Division, AGC's Construction Marketing Committee
and the joint AIA/AGC Committee.
Mashburn's leadership grows out of an entire career spent
in the construction industry, learning it from the inside
out. "Harry's success is a great blend of understanding
the business aspects of construction and appreciating good
design and craftsmanship," says Columbia architect and
long-time colleague Thompson Penney of LS3P Associates Ltd.,
Charleston. "He has a strong sense of the value that
architects bring to their clients and to contractors."
The two men also worked together on the AGC/AIA Committee.
Starting from Scratch
Mashburn didn't set out to be a contractor. After graduating
with a bachelor's degree in civil engineering from North Carolina
State in 1964, he spent two years working in the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers on an atomic demolition munitions team.
They were trained to drop behind enemy lines and blow up powerplants,
dams and other infrastructure-"real James Bond stuff,"
Mashburn says. "But when my battalion was sent to Vietnam,
I didn't go because there was no nuclear capability over there.
Instead, our group stayed at Fort Bliss, Texas, where we tested
war reserve components at White Sands, N.M. I also gained
some sitework experience with the Corps."
After two years, Mashburn left the military because "I
knew I'd never get to be a general," he says, and because
he wanted to try his hand at construction in the private sector.
"I also had a family to feed," he adds. He had married
his college sweetheart, Betsy, during his senior year in college,
and two of their three sons were born while Mashburn was still
in the service.
Back in Columbia, he worked as a field superintendent for
McDevitt & Street for two years and later as a project
manager for a well-respected local contractor, McCrory Construction,
building offices and shopping centers "all over the place.
I cut my teeth in retail," he says. "I went to work
in the private sector during the recession of the early '70s,
when offices were sitting empty and people were going bankrupt.
It was a good time to learn about the business of construction,
but it also helped me decide to start my own company."
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The Charleston Cancer Center, Charleston,
S.C., built by Mashburn Construction, is a new 25,000-sq-ft
medical office building with a 17,500-sq-ft oncology upfit.
(photo courtesy of mashburn construction co. inc.) |
Mashburn Construction Co. was born in 1976 with three employees-Harry,
one superintendent and Harry's assistant, Jane Andrews, who
is still with the company after 30 years. Their first job
was building an It's the Levi's store in Columbia for Nat
Love, a local car dealer whose family remains a Mashburn Construction
Co. customer.
"I think Harry and his guys have built six or eight
dealerships for the Love family over the years," says
Michael Love, Nat's son, and president of the Love Automotive
Group, Columbia. "Obviously, we trust them with our core
business."
Mashburn Construction grew steadily through the 1980s, doing
mostly office, retail, shopping centers, light industrial
projects and suburban office parks. "It was difficult
starting from scratch," Mashburn says. "But we gained
a lot of experience working directly with owners and developers,
and that helped me learn how to be an owner's advocate."
Spreading Out
Then the recession of the 1990s hit, and Mashburn Construction
sought new markets, including some hospital and medical office
building jobs. A decade later, health care projects make up
nearly 30 to 40% of the company's portfolio, with another
30 to 40% in offices and mixed-use, and some retail and renovation
jobs.
"We have a more diverse project base now, but that has
also required more business development," Mashburn says.
His youngest son Lee, 36, heads up business development for
the company, and his oldest son, Pat, 41, runs the company's
Myrtle Beach, S.C. office. Middle son Paul, 39, is vice president
of operations.
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Mashburn Construction's retail project
portfolio includes Sparkleberry Crossing, Retail Lot #9,
a 25,000-sq-ft design-build retail center in Columbia,
S.C.
(photo courtesy of mashburn construction co. inc) |
Nearly 90% of the company's jobsites are in the Carolinas,
and it is doing more urban renewal work in downtown areas.
The company's own headquarters in downtown Columbia was an
urban renovation project. "I believe in downtowns,"
Mashburn says. "We have our office here and three jobs
under way in downtown Columbia alone."
Mashburn also was one of the founders of Columbia's City
Center Partnership, which spearheads projects in the city's
business improvement district. "Harry's firm was one
of the first companies to renovate an old building for a downtown
headquarters," says Matt Kennell, president of the City
Center Partnership in Columbia. "Since then, they have
been involved in several rehabs and new projects downtown.
You can see their positive mark almost everywhere in downtown
Columbia."
Mashburn plans to spend the next year as the national president
of AGC spreading his passion for promoting contractors as
master builders and sharing the lessons of a lifetime in construction.
"For years, networking with my AGC peers has helped
me learn how to run my company," he says. "AGC has
fulfilled so many of my needs-for education, training, business
and industry changes. I have tried to give a lot of that back
through service to the association. Now I'll have the chance
to complete that journey."
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