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Taking a Flyer On A Dream

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Frederik Mülder has a dream.
It's been with him since he was a little boy. Now,
many youngsters want to be pilots; some want to fly
fighter jets, others aspire only to helicopters, and
some daredevils fantasize about being acrobats,
tumbling crazily amongst the clouds. Frederick
simply wants to fly the big jets and be an airline
pilot.
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Jesse Owens, the great Olympic
athlete, knew a lot about making dreams come true. "We
all have dreams. But in order to make dreams come into
reality, it takes an awful lot of determination,
dedication, self-discipline, and effort," he said.
Frederik is making his dream come true; he has already
started the arduous course to qualify as a Microlight
pilot.
The word "love" peppers the conversation when Frederik
talks about what he does. He loves computers, so he
added a part-time B.Sc. in Information Technology to
his Civil Engineering degree. He is, naturally, in
charge of software and hardware on his team at Africon
in Pretoria. He loves designing as well.
As the South African currency has strengthened, so
Africon has refocused on the domestic market. Local
golf courses and industrial developments have been
added to the prestigious international hotel projects
such as Madinat Jumeirah in Dubai and the Nova Vida
project in Angola. "We are currently busy with an
Ernie Els signature development off the N14 near
Fourways - the Gardener Ross Golf and Country Estate,"
says Frederik.
"We are also busy with a huge Distribution Centre for
Woolworths. This massive building merges 7 current
Distribution Centres into one. The building footprint
alone is 900m x 120m; the platform around it is big
enough to land a small aircraft on." The analogy is
typical.
Frederik and his team are responsible for the
Municipal Services aspect of projects. "We are still
in the process of moving completely to Civil Designer.
What we have noticed is that we completed the work
much faster than those still working on other
packages."
"I had just come back from a five month stint in
Mozambique when we evaluated Civil Designer. We
decided to standardise on Civil Designer when the
Gardener Ross project began. I went on the one-week
training course and picked up the design philosophy
very quickly. The sewer network on the project has 710
manholes and about 31.5km of pipe. Civil Designer
allowed us to cut the design and balancing time down
to just 2 weeks," says Frederik. "With what we had
previously, it would have been close to impossible to
balance this thing." |
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On the other packages the
bottleneck occurred with the CAD operator. Tying down
a CAD operator to clean up 10 sheets of long sections,
change the line types and put it on a drawing was
counter-productive. "Now with Civil Designer's
sheetfiles, we set the scale, and in literally a
minute you generate all the sheets and everything was
in the right spot. That really made a difference."
The training is rated as very good. The inquiry about
the level of support makes Frederik almost lyrical.
"Let me tell you," he says forcefully, "support is so
important. In the beginning we sometimes phoned three
times a day just to sort out little things we didn't
know. The Knowledge Base Support Manager, Brett
Pureveen has incredible patience and made sure our
queries got resolved in no time.
Moving to the new software created an unexpected
problem. "We had to shed workload, so another team was
tasked with the storm water component. We finished our
part of the project two months ago using Civil
Designer, while theirs were completed much later,
using alternative software. We are looking forward to
the next development when everyone will be using Civil
Designer and we can all enjoy the benefits."
The Maputo project provided valuable experience for
Frederik. "It was a World Bank project called
Sanitation for 7 Cities. I was contracted out to
German company Lahmeyer. The project encompassed
water, sanitation and drainage for the 7 cities in
Mozambique. Working there is not much different to
here, except for language. I worked closely with an
older engineer from Brazil who, like most of us, was
not fluent in languages other than our mother tongue.
Communication was interesting, to say the least," he
says with an easy laugh.
Meeting the donors and investors made a strong
impression. "Just meeting the Australians, Greeks,
Portuguese, Swedes, and the guys from USAID and the
UN, was an eye-opener. We think we have diverse
cultures, but experiencing the many different cultures
from around the world in a small country like
Mozambique was great."
"The Mozambique people were really lovely. They are
desperately poor, but they don't act like poor people.
They have great dignity, they are proud of what they
have," he says humbly.
It's hard to resist the obvious question of whether
the sky really is the limit for Frederik. But where
does he see himself in the future? Civil Engineering?
Information technology and computers? Or will he
follow his dream and pilot jets for the world's
airlines? "At the moment I have the best of both
worlds; civil engineering and computers. I have only
started my flying training, so who knows what the
future holds," he says with a gleam of anticipation in
his eye.
Anatolé France, a French Writer in the late 1800's
once said, "To accomplish great things, we must not
only act, but also dream; not only plan, but also
believe." Frederik Mülder will know what to do with
his dreams. |
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Last Updated:
November 02, 2005
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