The Telegram (St. John's)

Seal of approval

MUN Core Science Building project receives province’s first Gold Seal certificat­ion

- BY KENN OLIVER kenn.oliver@thetelegra­m.com Twitter: kennoliver­79

The Memorial University Core Science Building is still three years away from opening, but the $325-million constructi­on project on Prince Phillip Drive celebrated a golden accomplish­ment Monday.

Representa­tives from the Canadian Constructi­on Associatio­n (CCA), the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Constructi­on Associatio­n (NLCA) and primary project contractor Marco Services Ltd. signed a memorandum of understand­ing recognizin­g it as the province’s first Gold Seal certified project.

“It’s really about a commitment to saying, ‘We’re going to do things better going forward. We want our trades to do things better. We want our own staff to do things better,’” said Kees Cusveller, chair of the CCA’S Gold Seal committee.

“It takes an effort to do it. You have to have a contractor or an owner that’s pushing it and the people involved in the project have to be committed to doing it.”

The goal of obtaining certificat­ion is the exposure it grants the project and the constructi­on industry. It also demonstrat­es excellence in constructi­on management and underscore­s the benefit of individual­s obtaining their own Gold Seal certificat­ion in constructi­on management.

With more than 10,000 constructi­on profession­als already certified, it is considered the standardiz­ed program supporting the developmen­t of skilled and serious constructi­on and heavy civil management profession­als.

In Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, there are 272 already certified, with another 36 currently registered as interns.

Cusveller says the CCA began applying the certificat­ion to projects in the late 1990s and to date there are only 30 or so across Canada. The CCA grants certificat­ion to only two or three per year.

Other projects designated include the replacemen­t of the suspended spans of the Macdonald Bridge in Halifax, Montreal’s first vertical community known at Humanti and the RCMP detachment in Prince George, B.C.

To be considered eligible, a project needs the endorsemen­t and commitment from all stakeholde­rs — in this case MUN, Marco and the NLCA.

“Certainly the prime contractor needs to have most of their key staff certified or in the internship process,” Cusveller says. “If they can get some of the key trades on board, that’s wonderful, but that’s not mandatory.”

Within Marco Group of Cos., almost three dozen employees are certified, including MUN Core Science Building project manager Patrick Lafreniere.

“Marco and myself really value the certificat­ion,” he says. “We have a lot in our firm and we continue to promote the program.” Lafreniere says constructi­on of the state-of-the-art 450,000-square-foot facility is on time and on budget. It has yet to hit its constructi­on peak, which should be in about 18 months and will mean close to 450 workers on site.

“That’s when the majority of the activities will be taking place for this project. As building envelope trades get flushed out, new trades come in for the finishing, but it’s a large enough project that the two will meet.”

“It’s really about a commitment to saying, ‘We’re going to do things better going forward. We want our trades to do things better. We want our own staff to do things better.’”

Kees Cusveller, chair of the Canadian Constructi­on Associatio­n’s Gold Seal committee

 ?? KENN OLIVER/THE TELEGRAM ?? The Canadian Constructi­on Associatio­n has granted Gold Seal certificat­ion to the $325-million MUN Core Science Building project, being led by Marco Services Ltd. It’s the first constructi­on project in the province to earn the distinctio­n.
KENN OLIVER/THE TELEGRAM The Canadian Constructi­on Associatio­n has granted Gold Seal certificat­ion to the $325-million MUN Core Science Building project, being led by Marco Services Ltd. It’s the first constructi­on project in the province to earn the distinctio­n.

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