Associate Director, Major Programmes, Consultancy, UK
Well I didn’t take a traditional route. After studying business and finance, and then law, I worked in shipping and trading for four years. When the business dissolved I, quite randomly, ended up running an agriculture show ground which then led to a role at Ascot. Over a number of years I ran all the race days before playing a major role during the redevelopment of the venue, which was my first taste of construction.
The challenge and the responsibility. When it comes to events, deadlines can’t be moved. You have to make a lot of decisions and stand by them. The key thing is to make sure that the project keeps moving forward and the entire team remains focused on the end goal.
Working on something that is far more than a building but is about creating lasting benefits that give communities opportunities, inspire people and bring them together. Sports facilities in particular have a unique way of doing all that but all too often people become fixated on the venues or surrounding buildings and not on the overall objective to deliver experiences and bring about strategic change.
You need to have an open mind and be flexible in your approach. There are key processes that keep projects on track, knowing what they are just comes from experience, but every project I’ve ever worked on has had unique challenges and you have to be ready for that from day one.
My involvement in the development of UCL East as it represents the culmination of a long term involvement in the regeneration of the East End of London. It’s the university’s new campus on Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park – 160,000sq m of teaching facilities and student accommodation. It means a lot to me because of the opportunities that it will give to students and the local community – it’s the next chapter in Mace’s hugely successful involvement in London 2012.
I really like art. I do a bit of watercolour painting and I have a passion for collecting art. I have a modest collection of oil paintings, etchings, glass and ceramics.
That’s a good question. I enjoyed learning about law and I used to really enjoy acting so perhaps I would have been a barrister. Between the ages of 18 and 21 I had a summer job at a magistrate’s court. I quite enjoyed it but I doubt it would have led to such an interesting and varied career as I have had.