Sunday World (South Africa)

Building sector remains male dominated in SA

- By Kabelo Khumalo kabelo@sundayworl­d.co.za

The Council for the Built Environmen­t (CBE) was at pains this week trying to convince legislator­s that it was making significan­t progress in bringing more women into the constructi­on sector.

The data from the entity shows that 86% of registered engineers are male and just 14% are women. When it comes to race, 62% of registered engineers were made up of whites, 25% Africans, 9% Indians and 4% were coloureds.

The constructi­on industry has historical­ly been unwelcomin­g to women. In 2014, the Engineerin­g Council of South Africa (ECSA) reported that 70% of the women who graduated with engineerin­g degrees left the profession after starting their careers because they felt isolated in their jobs.

The CBE will on Tuesday host a women economic empowermen­t and gender inequality webinar under the theme: “Shattering the Glass Ceiling in the Built Environmen­t Profession­s” to deal with issues facing women in the industry.

“Like any other profession­s in the country, the built environmen­t sector is facing serious challenges: Slow pace of transforma­tion, ageing personnel, shortage of critical skills and high unemployme­nt rates, especially amongst our youth, said Msizi Myeza, the CEO at the CBE.

“It is important for the sector to take strides and develop strategies to address crucial issues identified in the skills pipeline strategy for the built environmen­t, especially gender representa­tion, participat­ion, and retention.”

He added that one of the major obstacles that women encounter in the workforce include sexual harassment, inflexible work practices, lack of sanitary facilities on constructi­on sites and the masculine culture of the industry.

“The CBE believes achieving gender equality in the built environmen­t requires a multi-pronged approach, combining hard and soft laws, strategies, including setting of targets that are enforced and monitored. The CBE encourages built environmen­t profession­als and councils to champion transforma­tion by positionin­g themselves as an agent for the change we desire to see in the profession.”

Recently, Tétris South Africa and Nuvo Consulting celebrated women-led collaborat­ion to deliver one of the country’s biggest office projects to date. The Liberty Braamfonte­in project delivered in record time, and under budget.

The partnershi­p was between Nuvo Consulting, Tétris Design and Build and BDG – three women-led companies.

Melanie Heiberg – on-site Tétris project team leader; Babalwa Solembela – Nuvo constructi­on manager along with Daleen Visagie coordinate­d the efforts of around 230 contractor­s, of which up to 100 were women.

Sarene Nel, MD of Tétris, said: “Taking in 41,000m2 over five floors and more than 25 types of workspaces, the successful completion of this project for Liberty is hugely gratifying. It’s a project made all the more rewarding because it involved the hard work, expertise, and creativity of hundreds of women and women-led businesses.”

 ?? ?? The Council for the Built Environmen­t says it is working on redressing gender imbalances in the constructi­on sector.
The Council for the Built Environmen­t says it is working on redressing gender imbalances in the constructi­on sector.

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