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Gary T. Bergeron, Newest Member of CSI’s Class of Fellows

By Peter Kray posted 09-27-2022 03:19 PM

  

Gary T. Bergeron, CSI, will be advanced to Fellowship during the "CSI Celebrates" event at the 2022 CSI National Conference Oct. 12–14 in Denver, Colo., becoming the newest member of CSI’s Class of Fellows.

Throughout his 14-year membership with CSI, Gary has notably contributed to construction education at the high school, university, and professional development levels, and has been a leader of the Gulf States Region and the Knoxville, Little Rock, and Chattanooga Chapters. Here, he discusses the honor along with some of the highlights of his career in the architecture, engineering, construction, and owner (AECO) industry.

What does being recognized as the 2022 Class of Fellows honoree mean to you?

The credit for my career success goes to several key people in my Construction Specification Institute journey. My construction journey actually began with my dad, Robert (Bob) Bergeron, whose first job was straightening old nails for his father’s contracting business for re-use.

When I was growing up in New Orleans, Dad worked as a geologist for Shell Oil Company but always stopped at construction sites to show my brother, Wes, and me how the “parts and pieces” went together. Dad taught us how to read blueprints at an early age when he built several scale ship models for Shell Oil from the original shipyard blueprints. We always helped him with projects around the house that were not started until Dad completed a rudimentary drawing using tracing paper and the old graphite lead holders. My brother or I held the flashlight or the other end of whatever Dad needed help with on his current assignment. Some of the construction projects we completed with him include laying a brick paver patio, extending the house roof over the patio, building a 20’x20’ separate workshop and a small sailboat, and re-shingling the house roof. 

 

What was your first job in the AECO industry?

My specification journey started when I attended Louisiana State University (LSU) in Baton Rouge. (Geaux Tigers!) I worked as a student draftsman in the LSU physical plant, where I drew small projects for the physical plant architect and engineers. My duties included indexing and maintaining the old ink on linen tracings and book specifications for past and present projects. I also trained the full-time non-student draftsperson who eventually replaced me. It was at the LSU physical plant that I became familiar with most of the project drawings and specification divisions.

When I graduated with an engineering design degree from the Mechanical and Industrial Engineering school, jobs were in short supply due to the oil market crash that affected the industry. I went back to LSU for a master’s in business administration and met my life partner, Jill. The business degree was never completed because our first child was born, and I needed a good-paying job to support our new family. A friend who had the same degree said there was a job opening at Mechanical Electrical Plumbing (MEP), his engineering firm in Baton Rouge. The design work at the MEP firm used the plastic lead holders on multiple layers of plastic mylar on a pin bar registration system. When the construction industry faltered again, we relocated to Augusta, Ga., for another mechanical design position where I worked for four years until we moved to Knoxville, Tenn.

 

How has being a member of CSI informed your life and career? 

My Institute journey goes back to the early 2000s when Richard (Dick) Kelso asked me to teach his Environmental Controls System Architecture class at the University of Tennessee when he went out of town. Susanne Tarovella persuaded me to present an MEP refresher for the Architectural Registration Exam (ARE) class in Memphis to the emerging professionals at the TN AIA symposium. Lisa Hoskins asked me to guest lecture on HVAC integration to her upper-level architecture class, and Darson Buckner convinced me to run for CSI Knoxville vice president where I followed several distinguished past chapter presidents such as William Sundquist, FCSI.

Nancy Roberts (past CSI Knoxville president) taught me how to write a clear agenda for a CSI Board meeting and how to table a discussion (Roberts Rules of Order) for committee work instead of spending valuable board meeting time. Suzan Jordan rejoined CSI Knoxville in 2013 and followed me as chapter president. Suzan has become one of my best CSI friends. I met Kathy Proctor FCSI at the CSI Knoxville 50th anniversary celebration where Kathy said she had seen some of my work. She wrote the Robert Brousseau nomination for which I was awarded in 2017, then Liz Icenogle from the Dynamic Chapter Program (DCP) asked me to emcee the awards ceremony at the CONSTRUCT in Nashville last year. It was William Sundquist’s encouragement that led CSI Knoxville to nominate me for a fellowship. Kathy Proctor put her writing skills to work again and solicited 10 letters of recommendation from many colleagues in the field.

 

Is there anyone you would like to recognize for supporting the work you do? 

Most of all, I would not be here without the best life partner and spouse, Jill, who edits my technical articles, helps me outline my presentations, and critiques my public speaking delivery during rehearsal and keeps me on an “even keel.”

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