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Texas Tech Produces Next-Gen Construction Leaders Thanks to Industry Tech

Challenge

Texas Tech University’s Department of Civil, Environmental & Construction Engineering prides itself on producing graduates who are ready to tackle challenging built industry projects their first day on the job. With several tailored programs across all construction and engineering disciplines, the school aims to equip its students with the knowledge, skills and tools to prepare the next generation of the industry’s workforce.

Solution

Bluebeam is among the top technology tools used at Texas Tech and is essential for preparing students for life in the construction industry. From its ‘Introduction to Construction’ first-year course to its comprehensive graduate-level offerings, Texas Tech’s use of Bluebeam on campus is helping students gain industry insights faster and more efficiently, thanks to its capabilities in several of the construction industry’s essential workflows and processes.

Benefits

Thanks to its integration of Bluebeam and other advanced industry technology in its curriculum, Texas Tech’s Department of Civil, Environmental & Construction Engineering boasts an employment rate above 90% for its three specialist programs (civil engineering, environmental engineering and construction engineering) upon graduation, with graduate starting salaries averaging above US$70,000 per year for all three degrees.

What’s more, students cite Bluebeam as crucial in helping them gain the skills and knowledge of the industry that have propelled them to in-demand internship opportunities while they’re in school, as well as attractive entry-level job offers upon graduation.

‘The way we were previously doing pay applications is the project manager would email me, I’d print them, everything was hard copy and then I’d carry this massive file of pay applications. That was not efficient. We had to find a better solution. And I was like, "Why don’t we use Bluebeam?"’

Maria White Construction Engineering Major Texas Tech

Don Bundock is a construction industry lifer.

Ask him to describe his interest and background in construction, and he’ll quickly reference a photo of himself at age 4 looking attentively at a concrete pour. He’ll then mention his family history, a lineage of builders he says goes all the way back to the 15th century.

‘I’m inclined to want to build things,’ Bundock said, ‘because I come from a family of shipbuilders from the 1400s. So, I think I’m pretty much genetically inclined to be a construction guy.’

Bundock’s love of and connection to the construction trade is only rivalled by his admiration for and belonging to Lubbock and Texas Tech University.

Born and raised in the West Texas town, a place perhaps most famous for being the birthplace of early rock music legend Buddy Holly, the 80-year-old Bundock speaks with a deep Texas twang and is rarely seen without his Texas Tech baseball cap comfortably fitted atop his head.

A 1969 Texas Tech graduate who went on to an illustrious engineering and construction career, including 30 years building locally in Lubbock and on the university’s campus, Bundock has spent the past seven years giving back as an instructor in the school’s Department of Civil, Environmental & Construction Engineering.

Graham Construction employee uses Bluebeam management tools to call out an issue to colleagues at the jobsite
Don Bundock, who worked in the construction and engineering industry for more than 30 years, has been an instructor at Texas Tech since 2017.

Teaching the Trade

Initially looking to ease into retirement by teaching one course, Bundock now teaches four courses encompassing 100 students. This gives him a unique front-row seat at the intersection of construction’s future workforce and contractors and other industry firms turning to the school to cultivate their next crop of talent.

Bundock is especially suited to teaching the next generation of construction professionals because of his embrace of using technology to get the job done. Bundock says he’s been keen on extensively studying how the computing revolution that paralleled his professional life could be integrated into construction.

‘Bluebeam has been mentioned by just about every contractor that I’ve interviewed here at Texas Tech.’

Don Bundock
Instructor
Texas Tech

‘I’ll never forget a professor walking across the stage at my graduation in 1969 who said, "One of these days computers are going to be talking to one another all over the world," and everybody’s going, "Are you kidding?"’ Bundock said.

‘I was always interested in advancing technology, and that continues to this day.’

To this end, Bundock has made it a hallmark of his teaching career that his students are using the latest and greatest in construction industry technology. Chief among these tools is Bluebeam.

‘[Bluebeam] has been mentioned by just about every contractor that I’ve interviewed here at Texas Tech,’ he said.

From simple PDF viewing and editing to even the most advanced specialist features, Bluebeam is comprehensively taught at Texas Tech in Bundock’s courses. Bundock’s students say having Bluebeam knowledge has been pivotal when it comes to landing summer internships.

Student working on a laptop.
Jacob Sauder, a construction management major at Texas Tech, has used the Bluebeam acumen he learned while in school every day during a project engineering internship.

Propelling Students Forward

For some students, having software skills is crucial because the full-time staff of the companies recruiting them aren’t always proficient with the technology, offering the students a chance to make an immediate impact.

This was the case for Maria White, a construction engineering major and one of Bundock’s students who, as an intern for a real estate development company near Lubbock, proposed using Bluebeam for some of its advanced digital collaboration features to complete pay applications.

‘The way we were previously doing pay applications is the project manager would email me, I’d print them, everything was hard copy and then I’d carry this massive file of pay applications. That was not efficient,’ White recalled. ‘We had to find a better solution. And I was like, "Why don’t we use Bluebeam?"’

‘Even though I was an intern, it left a lasting impact on the way the company runs things now when it comes to pay applications and just working together when people are in different places at the same time.’

Jacob Sauder, a construction management major and another of Bundock’s students, played a similar Bluebeam expert role during his project engineering internship. A vice president at his company needed a way to find similar elements throughout a 3,000-page construction document set in Bluebeam. Sauder showed him the search function in Bluebeam, which the vice president wasn’t previously aware of, and was able to help complete a task that may have previously taken hours in about a minute.

‘I learned that [the Bluebeam search function] in professor Bundock’s class through having Bluebeam available to me,’ Sauder said.

Picture of Texas Tech.
Texas Tech University’s Department of Civil, Environmental & Construction Engineering produces construction industry professionals across a range of specialist disciplines. The school boasts an employment rate above 90% for all its graduates.

Building the Future

Bundock says the importance of technology is validated through his observations of employers that attend Texas Tech job fairs on campus. As soon as companies see Bluebeam and other high-level industry software tools on student resumes, they immediately want to talk to them about internships and other job opportunities after college.

‘That’s what we want to see happening, where our students are getting credit for what they’re doing here at Texas Tech and they’re getting four and five job offers each,’ Bundock said.

Bundock says he’s proud of the role Texas Tech is continuing to play by imparting its students with innovative construction industry technology, including Bluebeam.

‘We feel like we’re going to lead the way, and I think we’re setting the bar very high,’ Bundock said. ‘People are going to have to jump to get ahead of us here at Texas Tech.’

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