Engineering alumnus leading $2 billion airport project
As the lead engineer on a $2 billion airport improvement project, UNC Charlotte alumnus Ashton Watson is involved in all types of engineering, on all types of capital jobs, with all types of stakeholders. And he’s having a ball doing it.
Watson graduated from the William States Lee College of Engineering with a Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering in 2006 and Master of Science in Civil Engineering in 2009. He is now the airport engineer for Charlotte Douglas International Airport and is in charge of the engineering aspects of “Destination CLT,” a $2 billion capital improvement project started in 2015 with the goal of “Building an Airport Fit for the Queen.”
Watson said, “We are the owner of the airport, so we are the owner of the project. We manage all of the architectural firms, engineering firms, contractors and consultants.”
The airport is a department of the city of Charlotte, where Watson first worked as a co-op student in the Department of Transportation. When he graduated in 2006, he joined the department full time.
“The DOT was a great experience. I kind of grew up there,” Watson said. “They were very supportive of me while I was working on my master’s, getting married and starting a family. I learned a ton about engineering and working in the professional world.”
After eight years with CDOT, Watson went to work in 2013 as a project manager at the airport. “Coming here was an opportunity to work on a project of monumental scope,” he said. “If you like engineering, this is the place to be. There is all kinds of engineering, all day, every day.”
Work involved in the “Destination CLT” project includes improving arrival and departure roads, building new parking decks, terminal expansions, and the addition and improvement of runways, taxiways and aprons. The engineering involved includes structural, geotechnical, transportation, environmental, hydraulics, mechanical, electrical, pavements, architectural, computer and aeronautical. On top of all this is the logistics and management of doing the work at the United States’ fifth-busiest airport.
“We have 47 million passengers a year. That’s almost a million a week,” Watson said. “We are the second-largest hub for the world’s largest airline, American Airlines. We have 30,000 employees here every day. Our economic impact on the Charlotte region is estimated at $16.2 billion a year.”
For “Destination CLT,” the number of stakeholders involved in planning and construction meetings is diverse and large. Besides the airport team, other groups at the table include the FAA, TSA, American Airlines, all contractors and subcontractors, the city and representatives of airport tenants such as restaurants and shops. And one of the key players in the project is the Airport Business Office.
“There is a whole business side to this that is very interesting,” Watson said. “The airport is a self-sustaining entity and not supported with tax money.”
Work completed to date includes several new parking decks, roadway improvements and the 230,000-square-foot expansion of Concourse A, which involved an airway apron expansion. The apron work included the airport using one of its two concrete plants to add 40 acres of concrete to the airway.
Work underway includes expanding arrival/departure roadways from six to 16 lanes, including adding elevated roadways. There is also construction of a new control tower, gate expansions, runway and taxiway additions and terminal and concourse renovations.
When the arrival/departure roadway project is completed in the next year, work will begin on a 400,000-square-foot expansion of the main terminal. The terminal expansion accounts for $500 million of overall “Destination CLT” project. Pedestrian access to the expanded terminal will be improved with tunnels and elevated skywalks from parking decks.