Different parts of my work have given me different rewards.
For some years, I was in the business of providing handpumps to rural communities in Bangladesh. Just watching the faces of the people who finally get a safe water supply that works, right in their own village, has been one of the best rewards.
I am sure that my colleagues on “I’m an Engineer” will also say that finding an engineering solution to a technical problem can also be very rewarding. For instance, while working in Baluchestan (Pakistan), I was asked to change the way in which water supplies were being designed and built because they were – at that time – so expensive and often didn’t even put any water in the taps ! It appears that the work was so effective that even the World Bank required that my design-and-build system had to be used wherever their money was used for rural, piped water supplies in Pakistan. However, the best reward was that we were able to provide water supplies to far more people because the new system was so much less expensive than before, and was guaranteed always to have water in every tap.
The best part for me is to be able to walk down the River Thames and point at things that I’ve been responsible for building. This can be anything from a new river bank, to a set of lock gates for boats to pass through or new bridges.
One of my first every projects, over 10 years ago was to put in some old-fashioned style street lamps running alongside the river in Oxford. They’re still there today and my wife is getting seriously bored of me pointing them out every time we go past!
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