Larisa N. scale
39, railway and traffic lead, north of California
GHD Inc.
Concord, Calif.
After 15 years working on the design of the rail and traffic sector, Larisa Escale has reached a level in his career when his experience and his portfolio speaks himself and says he “feels very good.”
Escale has led multiple reference projects, including phase II of $ 12.2 million in the traffic traffic area of Silicon Valley, which the District Communication Control Program of $ 1.1 million in the traffic system and the high-speed rail program of California of $ 128 million.
“It’s such a strange feeling.” “I remember the day I said something at a meeting and people were like,” OK, we will go with it. ”
She says it was the time when she knew she had graduated from being a career professional to a trusted leader.
“This was this change,” says Escale. “You go from this career professional before ‘Now you know what you talk about’ and there are decisions to make. It is as funny as it suddenly hits you.”
After obtaining a degree in Architecture from the University of California, Berkeley, he started his career in WSP and Parsons design companies, where he eventually oversaw more than $ 110 million in contracts with Bart $ 3.5 million bonds for capital traffic programs. While in Parsons, he also completed a Master’s Degree in Project Management at Golden Gate University. Then spent a year in Hill International before incorporating -S on GHD in 2022
Escole says that his role is now about going through a lot of work and more focused on “strategy, business development, recruitment”.
She says that “this is these softer skills. We still have to do a lot of work but less.”
Escale serves in several committees of the North -American Public Transport Association and is a member of the Women Seminar on Transportation and the Conference of Minority Transportation Officials.
She has also been a community service advocate since the ACE Mentor industry program inspired her high school to pursue architecture. He returned as a professional, playing numerous papers. As part of his dedication to empowering future women leaders in STEM, Escale participates with girls leading the way STEM Summit, Femineering and Bay Area Leeds.
As employees of the company return to the office and they begin to use more public transport, Escale says he is optimistic about how his work will be carried out to serve in the country.
“ Obviously, there are uncertainties about federal funding projects, ” he says, “ but I’m sure all of this will work because we can not forget -the aged infrastructure we have. We need to repair it. We need to be replaced. Otherwise, we cannot move our people, and if we cannot move our people, there is no economist.