Kimley-Horn & Associates

Highway Design and Software Migration

San Diego, CA

Jul 2007 - May 2008


 After resigning from CalTrans - 18 months of CAiCE software was too much - I quickly had three major consulting projects "fall in my lap". 

 I had been talking with management at the local Kimley-Horn office, I was likely to join them upon completion of my independent projects. 

Talking with Mike Ross (local VP) on the phone one day about some MicroStation/J issues.  "Mike, I refuse to work for a company that is still on MicroStation/J, so let me go ahead and come aboard and get you moving forward."

First step was to solve some engineering problems: the I-15 Managed Lane widenings match existing pavement slope, but to the nearest 0.5%.  No problem.  Create the template (using Display Rules), document and ensure staff know how to use them.

Step Two: migrate the office to new MicroStation and InRoads (the big jump to unlimited named levels, etc.).

Step Three: document

Step Four: train the staff.

The primary issues in the MicroStation/J migration were that 

  1. We were the first KHA region to move beyond the MicroStation/J 63-level convention.
  2. CalTrans was far from having their Level Naming Convention defined.
  3. Kimley-Horn is global: Multiple-clients

We ultimately decided on a "Practical Workspace": not overly segregated or complex.  Immediately portable to multiple clients (via mapping), easily extensible, and ready-for-CalTrans.  

Documentation and Training was via an internal website and in-person training.  The web was in-use long after I left and used by the other California offices. 

 

 

 

Right about when that was done, I got a call from Bentley Systems to transform their training.  Kind of a Dream job, had to take it.