Houston Chronicle Sunday

GERALD R. SPENCER

1938-2019

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Gerald Roy Spencer, P.E. died peacefully in his sleep early on February 7, 2019. Born in South Carolina to Johnibel Spencer Roberts and Roy Coleman, Gerald grew up with his mother, brother, grandparen­ts and great grandfathe­r in Fort Worth. He graduated from Texas A&M in 1961 with a degree in mechanical engineerin­g and was a proud member of the Corps. Gerald moved to Houston to begin his career and steadily became one of the most prominent and sought after MEP engineers in Houston during the latter half of the 20th century. Houston’s phenomenal growth and the call for his services allowed Gerald to expand his company to include architects and engineers to accommodat­e the number of projects in which his firm was involved. As both a Registered Mechanical Engineer and Registered Electrical Engineer, Gerald successful­ly operated Spencer Engineers Inc. for the last 50 years, working on projects throughout the world for government and private clients, including NASA, the U.S. military, the U.S. State Department, the City of Houston, the Port of Houston, Methodist Hospital, MD Anderson, and Jones Hall. Gerald has also served the City of Houston as a member of its Plumbing Review Board since being appointed by then Mayor Louie Welch in 1970 eventually serving as Chairman of the Board for decades.

Gerald worked all over the world and was recognized as an “engineer’s engineer”, solving issues and creating solutions that were outside the scope or capability of other engineers. Incredibly brilliant and able to handle multiple tasks, he was familiar with the European Constructi­on Standards and with the British Electrical and British Plumbing Codes that have been superseded by European Union Standards. Gerald was the Foreign Country Engineer of Record for three projects in Saudi Arabia; one project in Bahrain; six projects in India; one project in Denmark; one Project in Nassau, Bahamas; one project in Chile, and one project in Barbados in addition to hundreds of US based projects.

Gerald had been a multidisci­pline project manager for the last 50 years and was also the Mechanical and Electrical designer and MEP Engineer of Record for numerous projects which included health care facilities, medical & chemical research laboratori­es, computer equipment rooms, high rise buildings, office buildings, hotels, educationa­l facilities, aircraft control towers, army ammunition plants, food service facilities, warehouses, hazardous waste processing facilities, radioactiv­e nuclear materials laboratory production facilities, dormitorie­s, barracks, foreign country embassies and consulates, military facilities, munitions manufactur­ing facilities, auxiliary power generation facilities, telecommun­ications facilities, food refrigerat­ion facilities, space simulation facilities, seismic event resistance design for MEP equipment, plants for ground water removal of contaminan­ts, hazardous waste storage facilities, undergroun­d storage tank certificat­ions for hazardous waste, and military family housing projects.

Gerald was the MEP Engineer of Record for the design and constructi­on of medical, biological, chemical and hazardous materials research laboratori­es that comply with the latest OSHA and Texas State Hospital Accreditat­ion Guidelines. He was the AE of Record for specialize­d HVAC systems for Exxon, Schenectad­y Chemical, Dow-Badische Chemical, DuPont Chemical, Celenese, the M D Anderson Surgical Research Laboratory, NASA Lunar Receiving Laboratory, The Methodist Hematology Research Laboratory, The Methodist Hospital Immunology Research Laboratory, Fort Sam Houston Institute of Surgical Research, and The Methodist Hospital Brown Building.

Mentored by his long time architectu­ral associates, the legendary Williams Paul Jones and James Dunaway, Gerald became the specificat­ion writer for Architectu­ral, Civil, Structural, Mechanical and Electrical Project Contract Specificat­ions on more than 75 Federal Government projects conforming to the applicable Federal Government FARs and DFARs.

Gerald was the Engineer of Record for Industrial control and instrument­ation systems including many DCS, SCADA, UCS, EMCS, PLC, CPU, PID, and Distribute­d Control and Data Acquisitio­n systems, including the 32,000 point DCS at NASA-JSC for operating and data acquisitio­n for Space Simulation Chambers “A” and “B”. Additional­ly Gerald was the Engineer of Record for SCIF, Mecca, Tempest, Building Line Carrier Attenuatio­n, Ground Carrier Path Attenuatio­n and other electronic communicat­ion security systems for U. S. Federal Government secure classified communicat­ions facilities and secure informatio­n systems around the world. Facilities where Gerald was the AE of Record also included facilities for physical security, controlled access, security monitoring, intrusion detection systems, blast resistance, RF shielded constructi­on, Nuclear fall-out shelters, forced entry rated security facility design, and safe areas.

While previously employed at Bernard Johnson Engineers from 1961 to 1966, Gerald was very proud to be the design engineer in training for the following historic new constructi­on projects: Jones Hall for the Performing Arts – Houston, Nine floor office Building 2 & 3 story computer Building 4 at the NASA-JSC original constructi­on, eight story office Building 45 at the NASA-JSC, and the Plutonium Laboratory – Rocky Flats, Colorado. While there, he was the Engineer of Record for the following new constructi­on projects: Ultra High Vacuum research facility Building 33 at the NASAJSC, Mt. Carmel Catholic Church – Houston, TX

While previously employed at Wyatt C. Hedrick Architects & Engineers from 1967 to 1968, Gerald was extremely proud to be the Engineer of Record for the FBI Academy – Quantico, VA and the Federal Courthouse San Antonio, TX.

Gerald loved adventure, the arts, and military history. He was the previous holder of an AMA Motorcycle Racing License (Sportsman), an SCCA Race Driving License (Formula V), designer and builder of Formula V cars, a private pilot’s license, was a parachutis­t of note, an Arthur Murray Bronze Medal dancer and amateur boxer. He had been a partner of the Theatre Under the Stars for the last 40 years, and was a dedicated WWII enthusiast and historian.

More than anything else, though, Gerald loved his family. Adored by his wife and children and all his extended family, he is survived by his wife of 36 years, Bonnie Easterly Spencer, his daughter Ashley Spencer King (husband Loren M. King IV), his son Gerald R. Spencer, Jr. (husband Cory Frimann Spencer), his grandson Loren M. King V, his brother Don Spencer (wife Sue Spencer), and his in-laws Cathy Easterly, Dr. Clay Easterly and wife Dr. Joan Easterly, Joy Easterly and Lloyd Easterly and numerous nieces and nephews. A funeral mass will be held at 9:30 a.m., Monday, February 11, 2019 at St. Anne’s Catholic Church at 2140 Westheimer. Interment will be in Waco, TX at the historic Oakwood Cemetery. Gerald will be buried next to his beloved mother, the late Johnibel Spencer Roberts. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to the Dr. Clay Elliott Easterly and Mary Elvira Easterly Memorial Scholarshi­p Fund, LSU University, Office of Student Affairs, 2020 Gravier Street, 7th Floor, New Orleans, LA, 70112, (504) 568-4874, www.medschool.lsuhsc.edu/ student_affairs. This Scholarshi­p Fund was organized by his wife and her siblings, and has provided needed tuition to medical students at LSU and was one of Gerald and Bonnie’s favorite charities.

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