ovenbaked_cookie
Structural
- Jan 7, 2025
- 1
I’m a Bridge Engineer based in New Zealand with 6 years of experience. Early in my career, I was lucky to be involved in full design delivery—from concept through to construction—on several bridges including a steel truss and Super-T bridge. Lately, however, my company (like many others) has shifted to offshoring most design work (to Manila, Dhaka, SA, India, etc.), leaving local teams to handle project management and construction phase services.
While I’m grateful for my past experience, I’m concerned about my ability to continue growing technically—especially in structural design and number crunching. I’m also worried about the next generation of grads missing out entirely.
I’m not looking to change careers, but I’m wondering whether I should pivot into a niche to stay relevant and deepen my expertise—like learning geotechnical basics for better soil-structure interaction understanding, or seismic design, or advanced modelling. Alternatively, maybe I should look for firms or roles where design still happens locally.
Has anyone else faced this dilemma? Would love to hear how others are navigating this shift in our industry.
While I’m grateful for my past experience, I’m concerned about my ability to continue growing technically—especially in structural design and number crunching. I’m also worried about the next generation of grads missing out entirely.
I’m not looking to change careers, but I’m wondering whether I should pivot into a niche to stay relevant and deepen my expertise—like learning geotechnical basics for better soil-structure interaction understanding, or seismic design, or advanced modelling. Alternatively, maybe I should look for firms or roles where design still happens locally.
Has anyone else faced this dilemma? Would love to hear how others are navigating this shift in our industry.