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engineering legends
Jan 1, 2007

Richard G. Weingardt

Publication: Leadership and Management in Engineering
Volume 7, Issue 1
Popularizer of the catch phrase “the world is run by those who show up,” Richard “Rich” Weingardt is an internationally renowned structural engineer, successful entrepreneur, industry activist, community pacesetter, author of eight books, longtime magazine columnist, accomplished artist, sought-after public speaker, and an adventurer. He has traveled extensively on all seven continents and lectured on six of them—Antarctica being the exception. “Weingardt is truly a twenty-first-century Renaissance Man,” stated Sal Galletta, chairman of the American Engineering Alliance (AEA). “His wide-ranging and powerful actions have both greatly impacted the engineering profession and served the public interest and [public] good.”
When Weingardt received AEA’s Herald Award in 2003, Galletta added, “His extensive writings and lectures consistently beat the drum for empowerment for engineers, exhorting them to step up and take their rightful place of leadership in society. He has expanded on these themes with practical advice to guide individual engineers and other professionals on the path to these goals. He has presented technical engineering information to the general public in a manner that is easily read and understood, and he has extensively exposed this country’s youth to the wonders of engineering.”
Fig. 1. Richard George Weingardt (courtesy of Richard Weingardt Consultants, Inc.)
Weingardt is the founder of the Denver-based engineering firm Richard Weingardt Consultants, Inc. (RWC). By 2000, four decades after its inception, RWC completed more than 4,500 significant projects worldwide, many of them engineering excellence award winners. Among Weingardt’s far-reaching body of work are countless cutting-edge and innovative structural designs—some ranked, when complete, as the newest or largest of their kind.
Representative projects in Colorado that fall in this category are the posttensioned concrete roof over the ballroom at Northeastern Junior College, the steel-truss tube tension-ring dome of the Jefferson County Courthouse, the thin-shell lightweight-concrete roof of the Adams County Community Center, the buried gondola complex at the top of Keystone Mountain, and the underground Gold Hill reservoir near Greeley.
Weingardt’s books and five-hundred-plus papers and articles address a wide array of subjects ranging from Native American history to engineering, business, leadership, and creativity. Many of his writings have appeared in numerous publications around the world and have been translated into French, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, and Arabic.
In 2003, Weingardt was awarded the Journalism Award of the American Association of Engineering Societies (AAES), the first and only engineer to ever receive the national award. Its citation spotlighted two of his books, Forks in the Road: Impacting the World around Us, and RAUT: Teacher, Leader, Engineer. His latest book, Engineering Legends, which features the contributions of civil engineers in developing America from the Revolutionary War to the present, was the focal point for his presentation to the Library of Congress in 2006.
A motivational speaker and practitioner, Weingardt has been active in both professional and community groups. He was the 1995–1996 national president of the American Council of Engineering Companies (ACEC) and has served on numerous boards and commissions appointed by three governors of Colorado. He is a registered professional engineer in twenty-nine states.
Born on March 23, 1938, in Sterling, Colorado, Weingardt was the oldest son of Martin and Caroline (Bauer) Weingardt. His siblings are Ronald, Janice, and Dianna. Their grandfather, John Weingardt, a German house builder and master cabinetmaker, immigrated to the United States from the German colonies along the Volga River in Russia, settling in Colorado in 1912.
Weingardt attended St. Anthony’s Catholic School in Sterling for twelve years. Active in sports, he lettered in basketball and football in high school, excelling as a star halfback and linebacker back in the days when athletes played both defense and offense. His nickname with sports reporters and his teammates was “Ace.” As a youth, Weingardt was an altar boy, and earned money mowing lawns and delivering the Sterling Journal Advocate newspaper. In junior and senior high, he worked summers and weekends for his father, a prominent Colorado general contractor, doing construction work.
An excellent student in the humanities as well as in math and science, academic talent was not the sole factor in Weingardt’s decision to pursue engineering as a career, a choice he made early. His exposure to the spectacular Royal Gorge suspension bridge, which spans a half-mile-deep granite canyon carved by the Arkansas River, on a family vacation into the Colorado Rockies, was his inspiration for wanting to become a structural engineer. Weingardt was in grade school at the time, and enjoyed the satisfaction he derived from creating and building things. He greatly admired his father, who thought highly of engineers and architects, and so becoming an engineer seemed totally natural, in order, and logical to him.
Weingardt graduated from high school in 1956 as class valedictorian. He attended the University of Colorado at Boulder, earning degrees in civil and structural engineering—a bachelor’s in 1960 and a master’s in 1964. His graduate school thesis on thin shell analysis was the basis for his first book, Thin Shell Design, published in 1973.
On May 30, 1959, Rich married his high school sweetheart, Evelyn “Evie” Scheberle, at St. Anthony’s Catholic Church in Sterling. She was the oldest of the four children of Harold and Dorothy (Engle) Scheberle. Rich and Evie would have three children—Nancy, Susan, and David—and would travel the world together.
Armed with his bachelor’s degree, Weingardt went to work as a GS-7 grade level engineer for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) in Denver in 1960. During his four years with the USBR, he was involved in a wide array of structural projects, from bridges and towers to buildings and power plants, and spent nine months in northern California at the construction sites of the Trinity Dam and Power Plant and the Lewiston Dam, Power Plant, and Fish Hatchery. His design projects included the USBR Administrative Offices in Montrose, Colorado, the Flaming Gorge Dam Visitors Center in Utah, the Yellow Tail Dam Visitors Center in Montana, and the Red Willow and Willard Canal bridges in the Missouri River basin district.
In 1964, Weingardt became a registered professional engineer in the state of Colorado. That same year, he went to work for the distinguished Denver consulting engineering firm Ketchum, Konkel, Ryan, and Fleming. There, he served as project engineer on such projects as the Antlers Hotel and the Holly Sugar Towers, both in Colorado Springs, and the Currigan Convention Center in Denver.
In January of 1966, Weingardt established RWC, with offices in Denver and Sterling, Colorado, and Lincoln, Nebraska. Among the firm’s first major projects were three multimillion-dollar university buildings at Northeastern Junior College in Sterling and dozens of schools and hospitals in western Nebraska.
Some of RWC’s more prominent award-winning projects were Concourses A, B, and C at the Denver International Airport; the Discovery Learning and Integrated Teaching Engineering Laboratories at the University of Colorado; Harrah’s New Orleans Jazz Casino; the Cowboy Hall of Fame Museum in Oklahoma City; the Jefferson County Courthouse in Golden, Colorado; the Gold Hill Buried Reservoir near Greeley, Colorado; Dallah Towers in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia; Ceres Agricultural Mills in western Russia; Farmers Insurance Regional Headquarters in Kansas City, Missouri; the Keystone Mountain Gondola Interchange in Keystone, Colorado; and the 92nd Avenue overpass in Westminster, Colorado.
Weingardt himself is the recipient of numerous industry and community honors, including:
The History and Heritage Award from the American Society of Civil Engineers (2006);
Induction into the United States Hall of Fame for Engineering, Science, and Technology by the International Technology Institute (2005);
The Herald Award from the American Engineering Alliance (2003);
The Zabel Gold Medal from the International Technology Institute (2003);
The Engineering Journalism Award from the American Association of Engineering Societies (2002);
Designation as an Honorary Member of the American Society of Civil Engineers (2001);
The Silver Medal (for outstanding engineer) from the University of Colorado at Denver (2000);
The Distinguished Service Award (for life achievement) from the Regents of the University of Colorado at Boulder (1998);
The Gold Medal (for life achievement) from the Colorado Engineering Council (1997);
The Orley Phillips Award from the American Council of Engineering Companies Colorado chapter (1996);
The Engineering Leadership Award from the Massachusetts Engineering Center (1996);
The George Norlin Medal from the University of Colorado at Boulder (1995);
The Edmund Friedman Award from the American Society of Civil Engineers (1994);
The Centennial Gold Medal from the University of Colorado at Boulder’s College of Engineering (1994);
The Engineer of the Year Award from the American Society of Civil Engineers Colorado chapter (1994);
The Alfred J. Ryan Award from the Professional Engineers of Colorado (1992);
The George Washington Award from the American Council of Engineering Companies Colorado chapter (1992); and
The Distinguished Engineering Alumnus Award from the University of Colorado at Boulder (1988).
When Weingardt was elected into the Hall of Fame for Engineering, Science, and Technology (HOFEST) in 2005, Dr. I. S. Tuba, Executive Director of International Technology Institute (ITI) and Secretariat to HOFEST, said, “Weingardt’s distinguished creative achievements as an eminent leader and world-renowned structural engineer of the highest order—and his notable efforts at elevating the profession—have greatly enlightened the public about issues concerning the impact of engineering on modern society, especially with regard to the creation of wealth and the protection of everyone’s standard of life.”
Fig. 2. Front entrance to the Engineering Building on the University of Colorado–Boulder campus (courtesy of Richard Weingardt Consultants, Inc.)
In addition to serving on a number of university advisory boards over the last twenty-five years, Weingardt was the chair of the 100th Anniversary Committee for the one-hundred-year celebration of the College of Engineering at the University of Colorado at Boulder in 2001. College boards Weingardt has sat on include:
Denver University’s College of Engineering;
The University of Nebraska’s Sidney Technical College;
The University of Colorado at Boulder’s College of Engineering;
The University of Colorado at Denver’s College of Engineering; and
The University of Texas at Austin’s College of Civil Engineering.
Along with being active in leadership in numerous engineering and professional groups nationally and locally, Weingardt has held several public service positions. Internationally, he was the U.S. representative at the United Nations Industrial Development Organization’s First Consultation Conference on Consulting Engineering and Architectural Services in Vienna, Austria, in 1995.
Nationally, he was a cofounder of Architects and Engineers Insurance Company (AEIC) in Greenville, Delaware, a professional liability insurance company for practicing design professionals. He served on AEIC’s Board of Directors and Executive Committee from its inception in 1987 until 2001. His involvement in Colorado includes:
The Colorado State Long Range Planning Subcommittee;
The Colorado Historic Preservation Review Board within the National Park Service;
The “Vision Colorado” Blue Ribbon Planning Panel for the State of Colorado;
The Board of Appeals Committee for Arapaho County, Colorado;
Vice president of the Sterling, Colorado, Fine Arts Council;
The Building Code Revision Committee for the City of Denver;
The Highland Neighborhood Authority Advisory Board in Denver;
The Colorado State Electrical Board;
The State Capitol Advisory Committee; and
The Colorado Historic Records Advisory Board.
An international lecturer, Weingardt has made major presentations on engineering and business, including:
International conventions for FIDIC (International Federation of Consulting Engineers) in Istanbul, Turkey, Sidney, Australia, and Capetown, South Africa;
International conferences for CNEC (Camara Nacional de Empresas de Consultoria) in Mexico City, Mexico;
National conventions for the American Institute of Architects, American Council of Engineering Companies, American Institute of Steel Construction, American Society of Civil Engineers, Design Professionals Coalition, Society for Marketing Professionals, Professional Services Management Association, and Structural Engineers Associations in several states; and
Engineering colleges throughout the United States and around the world, including England, Germany, China, Japan, Taipei, and Australia.
On the cover of his book Engineering Legends, Henry Hatch, former head of the Army Corps of Engineers, states, “Weingardt, as an eminent engineer and an accomplished author, is a legend himself. His collection of inspiring profiles is a fitting celebration of civil engineering’s true heroes. By showing how regular people became extraordinary people, this work inspires all engineers to reach beyond their assumed limits and ‘be all they can be.’”
Weingardt has long been an activist in challenging engineers to assume more meaningful leadership roles in society. “As the single most important group responsible [for] maintaining a nation’s infrastructure and standard of life, engineers must get beyond just making things run and start running things,” said Weingardt. “Increasingly, the world will become more technologically complex. Major public decisions will need meaningful input from those with a solid knowledge of engineering and technology. Because of this, large numbers of engineering leaders willbe needed, not just in the engineering industry, but in the public arena as well. The demands on tomorrow’s engineers require they develop both their technical and people skills to the highest level possible.”
After his second book, Sound the Charge, which describes the nation’s last Plains Indian battle on the Central Plains of Colorado, Weingardt’s quiescent interest in oil painting was rekindled. Long a witness to the changes and moods of the western landscape—and curious about America’s Indians and pioneers—his expressions on canvas bring to life the land as Native Americans and the nation’s first immigrants must have experienced it. Weingardt’s oil paintings hang in the lobbies of corporations throughout the Rocky Mountain region and in private collections nationally and internationally.
Weingardt remains active in his firm, serving as CEO and Chairman of the Board. He and his wife Evie reside in Denver in the summer, and in Glendale, Arizona, in the winter, and continue to travel to as many exotic places as possible.

Biographies

Kenneth Wright is the founder and CEO of Wright Water Engineers, Inc., and author of the books Machu Picchu: A Civil Engineering Marvel (ASCE, Reston, Va., 2000) and Water for the Anasazi: How the Ancients of Mesa Verde Engineered Public Works (Public Works Historical Society, Kansas City, Mo., 2003).

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Go to Leadership and Management in Engineering
Leadership and Management in Engineering
Volume 7Issue 1January 2007
Pages: 34 - 37

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Published online: Jan 1, 2007
Published in print: Jan 2007

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Kenneth R. Wright, Hon.M.ASCE
P.E.

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