Transportation Construction Inspector

Hill International, Inc.

The Role

Overview

Inspect daily transportation construction to ensure compliance with plans, specs, and standards.

Key Responsibilities

  • issue alert
  • field observation
  • problem solving
  • report documentation
  • daily inspection
  • compliance check

Tasks

-Be proactive and alert project management professionals to issues that may come up in the field -Observe field work to ensure workmanship and materials meet standards -Provide solutions to mitigate those problems -Document the daily inspection report and various other reports -Provide daily inspection of construction work within a given discipline to ensure the project is in compliance with plans and specifications

Requirements

  • penndot
  • tci-1
  • 1 year
  • concrete tech
  • necept
  • nicet ii

What You Bring

-One (1) year minimum PennDOT experience as a Transportation Construction Inspector 1 (TCI-1) or higher and has one (1) of the following three (3) certifications: PennDOT Concrete Technician Certification, NECEPT Field Technician Certification, or NICET Level II Certification or higher in Highway Construction, only NICET Certifications in Highway Construction are allowed unless special circumstances of other NICET subfields are requested for Central Office approval

The Company

About Hill International, Inc.

-Grown from a regional project management firm into a global infrastructure consultancy. -Merged into Global Infrastructure Solutions in December 2022 after trading publicly on NYSE since 2008. -Provides project, program, and construction management, as well as cost engineering, scheduling, risk management, and advisory services. -Known for delivering landmark projects such as the World Trade Center reconstruction and the Cairo Monorail. -Notable for high-profile rescue and recovery roles, including claims analysis on the Eurotunnel project, and growth through strategic acquisitions worldwide.

Sector Specialisms

Industrial

Mining

Pharmaceutical

Technology Facilities

U.S. Federal Government

Infrastructure

Buildings

Residential

Commercial

Water Resources

Heavy Civil

Marine

Transport

Utilities

Energy

Solar

Wind

Nuclear