Active 5 years, 9 months ago
Greg A. Howell
Gregory Alvin Howell (Greg Howell) passed away peacefully on June 15, 2020 at home in Ketchum, Idaho.
He was born February 3, 1943, in Springfield, Missouri to Alvin Hinshaw Howell and Joyce Howell, née Gregory. He lived in Independence, Missouri before moving to Scottsdale, Arizona when he was in high school. Greg studied construction engineering at Stanford, was a member of the ATO fraternity, and played on the university rugby team. After he graduated in 1965, Greg joined the Navy as a Lieutenant Commander in the Civil Engineering Corps and commanded Mobile Construction Battalion 11, better known as the Seabees. He served in Vietnam in Dong Ha and then led a group of 12 Navy men in a kind of Peace Corp role in northern Thailand for one year. After returning to the U.S. he served as Aide to Admiral Robert Wooding. Among his duties was recruiting on university campuses in full dress uniform amidst the rising protests against the war in Vietnam.
In 1972, after leaving the Navy, Greg returned to Stanford for a Master’s in Construction Engineering. Two of his instructors, Henry Parker and Clark Oglesby, had just authored a book on construction productivity improvement. Their teaching inspired Greg to explore more fully how to improve construction work methods, and in 1989, Greg joined his mentors as author of Construction Productivity Improvement. After graduating in 1973, he started working at Timelapse, Inc. in Mountain View, CA. Greg eventually took over the company and hired his future wife, Dana Langhorne, as office manager.
Timelapse produced cameras and projectors used to analyze work methods on construction projects. Greg went all over the United States and out of the country, selling his products, showing buyers how to use them, and also using them himself when hired as a consultant. One such consulting job was on a project in Venezuela where five buildings were underway simultaneously. Greg was hired to film the worst performing of the buildings. In a confusion of Spanish demonstrative pronouns (this one, that one), he managed to film the best building. That only became evident when he showed his film to the client, who was shocked at the obvious potential for improvement in work they thought could not be further improved. In later years, Greg said that seeing work on film revealed an entirely different world from what’s written in most textbooks. It is much messier, more complicated, and offers huge potential for improvement. That insight led him to start Howell & Associates, a consulting company, to analyze and improve work methods on construction projects. In the early 1980s, Howell & Associates initiated an All Parties Workshop in the San Francisco Bay area to bring together representatives of construction owners, unions, and contractors to find better ways of working together. Meeting together over several years helped forge bonds between individuals who may previously have considered each other enemies. One way of changing attitudes was through ‘games’, another of Greg’s many talents. He used games to simulate problematic situations and promote reflection on better ways to behave. He learned a lot from Jerry Talley, a sociology lecturer at Stanford, and went on to invent or adapt many such simulations for use in teaching university students and industry practitioners. To name but a few: Parade of Trades (to experience the impact of variation and uncertainty on construction workflows and project performance), the Airplane Game (to teach basic Lean concepts and methods through assembling airplanes from lego blocks), and Silent Squares (teaches us to look for win-win solutions).
Greg and Glenn Ballard first met on a project in Texas in 1979 and began a lifelong intellectual partnership, each learning with and from the other. In this first meeting, Greg was the teacher. The project was substantially late and over budget only 9 months from scheduled completion. Along with Mike Casten of Construction Concepts and University of Texas Civil Engineering Professors John Borcherding and Richard Tucker, they helped the project complete on time and budget, and made the cover of Engineering News Record. Glenn, one of the Brown & Root area engineers on that petrochemical project, coordinated the activities of the consultant team. Naturally, Greg led efforts to improve work methods. In his teaching, he said that it was quite easy to improve how various operations, such as erecting fabricated piping, were performed, but much more difficult to see those savings in project financial reports. That insight was the springboard for Greg (and Glenn) to expand his focus beyond work methods to include the management systems and cultures in which the work is done. In a delay survey on that same project, craftworkers reported that half the time they asked for something at a tool room, what they wanted was not available. The project manager was, to say the least, skeptical, that shortages could be so high. Greg sat in tool rooms and counted. He found a turndown rate of 47% and became convinced that those closest to doing the work know best what is actually happening at the work face.
Another of Greg’s important contributions beyond work methods improvement may well have been bringing Fernando Flores’ language action into the Lean Construction movement. Along with Hal Macomber, a student of Flores, Greg claimed that projects were networks of commitments, and provided a process for learning how to make reliable promises on which successful projects are grounded.
Greg and Glenn began a long career of working together, both in consulting and in construction management research. These tended to intertwine, with practice spurring the development of explanatory theory, and application of theory spurring further improvement in practice. In 1993, they were among the founders of the International Group for Lean Construction, primarily focused on learning how to apply Lean principles and methods to the management of construction projects and companies through research. They developed the Last Planner System of project production control, which was tested and improved on consulting projects, including a major refinery revamp in Venezuela in 1994-5, where they were joined by Mike Casten in again saving a project struggling to complete on time and budget. They came to understand that while they knew how to save such projects, they did not know how to prevent them from happening in the first place. Thinking that prevention was the right place to focus their efforts, Greg and Glenn founded the Lean Construction Institute in 1997, in order to work with construction industry companies to develop and deploy Lean thinking and practice.
In 1986, Greg moved from California to Albuquerque, where he held the position of Visiting Professor, funded by the New Mexico AGC, in the construction program at the University of New Mexico. Intent on achieving tenure, with the help of Alex Laufer, Greg published the mandatory research papers. “Interaction Between Subcycles” examined the use of buffers to decouple construction operations, highlighting the importance of a production/operations management perspective. “Uncertainty and Project Objectives” reported that uncertainty regarding both what is to be built and how to build it were typically very high even after the start of construction. This theme of reducing avoidable uncertainty and managing within uncertainty not yet reducible persisted throughout Greg’s professional life.
In 1997 he left the University and moved to Ketchum, Idaho, and in 2001, founded Lean Project Consulting with Hal Macomber.
Greg traveled all over the world and was involved in associations, academic institutions, businesses, and all kinds of endeavors associated with the Lean movement.
Greg was a connector. He knew and maintained contact with an enormous number of people all over the world. Ask him who knows about <you name it> and he was very likely to know that person. He helped innumerable students of construction with career choices and topics for papers. He gave advice freely to all construction industry practitioners who asked him, and there were many. In his consulting, wanting to avoid the embarrassment of having repeat customers for the wrong reason, Greg tried to develop his clients’ ability to do what he had been hired to do. This ‘facilitative consulting’, to use Peter Block’s term, assured that the next consulting engagement with a client would be to solve a different problem or develop a different capability.
Greg was first and foremost a great speaker. His presentations to various organizations all over the world are too numerous to count. Greg was also a prolific and powerful writer. Google Scholar lists over one hundred publications.
During his life, Greg touched so many people and changed so many lives for the better. It is hard to overestimate the number of companies, organizations, and individuals who were affected by him. He was a true renaissance man who had an unbounded curiosity and took an interest in everything and everyone. He loved poetry, he raised bees, made his own beer, was a continual problem solver, loved to work and he was always open for any kind of adventure.
He will be remembered for his incredible sense of humor and storytelling, for his caring and big-hearted nature and his willingness to help all animals and people, his ingenuity and creativity in dreaming up and physically creating all sorts of new ways to solve a problem - not just engineering and structural problems but also in business organizations and relationships and so much more.
Greg would like us to note that he currently holds no world records. However, in 2011, he was elected to the National Academy of Construction, and in that same year, together with Glenn Ballard, received the inaugural Pioneer Award from the Lean Construction Institute, in recognition of their exceptional contributions. In 2017, the International Group for Lean Construction initiated the Greg Howell Best Paper Award, and in 2019 commemorated his contributions to the international Lean community with dinner, speeches, and photographs.
He is survived by his wife of 40 plus years, Dana Langhorne Howell, his daughter Emily Thomsen, son-in-law Ian Thomsen, 3 grandchildren, his brother Kenneth Howell (Kris Slentz), and his two favorite dogs, Chispa and Furgus.
Victor Sanvido, 2020
He was born February 3, 1943, in Springfield, Missouri to Alvin Hinshaw Howell and Joyce Howell, née Gregory. He lived in Independence, Missouri before moving to Scottsdale, Arizona when he was in high school. Greg studied construction engineering at Stanford, was a member of the ATO fraternity, and played on the university rugby team. After he graduated in 1965, Greg joined the Navy as a Lieutenant Commander in the Civil Engineering Corps and commanded Mobile Construction Battalion 11, better known as the Seabees. He served in Vietnam in Dong Ha and then led a group of 12 Navy men in a kind of Peace Corp role in northern Thailand for one year. After returning to the U.S. he served as Aide to Admiral Robert Wooding. Among his duties was recruiting on university campuses in full dress uniform amidst the rising protests against the war in Vietnam.
In 1972, after leaving the Navy, Greg returned to Stanford for a Master’s in Construction Engineering. Two of his instructors, Henry Parker and Clark Oglesby, had just authored a book on construction productivity improvement. Their teaching inspired Greg to explore more fully how to improve construction work methods, and in 1989, Greg joined his mentors as author of Construction Productivity Improvement. After graduating in 1973, he started working at Timelapse, Inc. in Mountain View, CA. Greg eventually took over the company and hired his future wife, Dana Langhorne, as office manager.
Timelapse produced cameras and projectors used to analyze work methods on construction projects. Greg went all over the United States and out of the country, selling his products, showing buyers how to use them, and also using them himself when hired as a consultant. One such consulting job was on a project in Venezuela where five buildings were underway simultaneously. Greg was hired to film the worst performing of the buildings. In a confusion of Spanish demonstrative pronouns (this one, that one), he managed to film the best building. That only became evident when he showed his film to the client, who was shocked at the obvious potential for improvement in work they thought could not be further improved. In later years, Greg said that seeing work on film revealed an entirely different world from what’s written in most textbooks. It is much messier, more complicated, and offers huge potential for improvement. That insight led him to start Howell & Associates, a consulting company, to analyze and improve work methods on construction projects. In the early 1980s, Howell & Associates initiated an All Parties Workshop in the San Francisco Bay area to bring together representatives of construction owners, unions, and contractors to find better ways of working together. Meeting together over several years helped forge bonds between individuals who may previously have considered each other enemies. One way of changing attitudes was through ‘games’, another of Greg’s many talents. He used games to simulate problematic situations and promote reflection on better ways to behave. He learned a lot from Jerry Talley, a sociology lecturer at Stanford, and went on to invent or adapt many such simulations for use in teaching university students and industry practitioners. To name but a few: Parade of Trades (to experience the impact of variation and uncertainty on construction workflows and project performance), the Airplane Game (to teach basic Lean concepts and methods through assembling airplanes from lego blocks), and Silent Squares (teaches us to look for win-win solutions).
Greg and Glenn Ballard first met on a project in Texas in 1979 and began a lifelong intellectual partnership, each learning with and from the other. In this first meeting, Greg was the teacher. The project was substantially late and over budget only 9 months from scheduled completion. Along with Mike Casten of Construction Concepts and University of Texas Civil Engineering Professors John Borcherding and Richard Tucker, they helped the project complete on time and budget, and made the cover of Engineering News Record. Glenn, one of the Brown & Root area engineers on that petrochemical project, coordinated the activities of the consultant team. Naturally, Greg led efforts to improve work methods. In his teaching, he said that it was quite easy to improve how various operations, such as erecting fabricated piping, were performed, but much more difficult to see those savings in project financial reports. That insight was the springboard for Greg (and Glenn) to expand his focus beyond work methods to include the management systems and cultures in which the work is done. In a delay survey on that same project, craftworkers reported that half the time they asked for something at a tool room, what they wanted was not available. The project manager was, to say the least, skeptical, that shortages could be so high. Greg sat in tool rooms and counted. He found a turndown rate of 47% and became convinced that those closest to doing the work know best what is actually happening at the work face.
Another of Greg’s important contributions beyond work methods improvement may well have been bringing Fernando Flores’ language action into the Lean Construction movement. Along with Hal Macomber, a student of Flores, Greg claimed that projects were networks of commitments, and provided a process for learning how to make reliable promises on which successful projects are grounded.
Greg and Glenn began a long career of working together, both in consulting and in construction management research. These tended to intertwine, with practice spurring the development of explanatory theory, and application of theory spurring further improvement in practice. In 1993, they were among the founders of the International Group for Lean Construction, primarily focused on learning how to apply Lean principles and methods to the management of construction projects and companies through research. They developed the Last Planner System of project production control, which was tested and improved on consulting projects, including a major refinery revamp in Venezuela in 1994-5, where they were joined by Mike Casten in again saving a project struggling to complete on time and budget. They came to understand that while they knew how to save such projects, they did not know how to prevent them from happening in the first place. Thinking that prevention was the right place to focus their efforts, Greg and Glenn founded the Lean Construction Institute in 1997, in order to work with construction industry companies to develop and deploy Lean thinking and practice.
In 1986, Greg moved from California to Albuquerque, where he held the position of Visiting Professor, funded by the New Mexico AGC, in the construction program at the University of New Mexico. Intent on achieving tenure, with the help of Alex Laufer, Greg published the mandatory research papers. “Interaction Between Subcycles” examined the use of buffers to decouple construction operations, highlighting the importance of a production/operations management perspective. “Uncertainty and Project Objectives” reported that uncertainty regarding both what is to be built and how to build it were typically very high even after the start of construction. This theme of reducing avoidable uncertainty and managing within uncertainty not yet reducible persisted throughout Greg’s professional life.
In 1997 he left the University and moved to Ketchum, Idaho, and in 2001, founded Lean Project Consulting with Hal Macomber.
Greg traveled all over the world and was involved in associations, academic institutions, businesses, and all kinds of endeavors associated with the Lean movement.
Greg was a connector. He knew and maintained contact with an enormous number of people all over the world. Ask him who knows about <you name it> and he was very likely to know that person. He helped innumerable students of construction with career choices and topics for papers. He gave advice freely to all construction industry practitioners who asked him, and there were many. In his consulting, wanting to avoid the embarrassment of having repeat customers for the wrong reason, Greg tried to develop his clients’ ability to do what he had been hired to do. This ‘facilitative consulting’, to use Peter Block’s term, assured that the next consulting engagement with a client would be to solve a different problem or develop a different capability.
Greg was first and foremost a great speaker. His presentations to various organizations all over the world are too numerous to count. Greg was also a prolific and powerful writer. Google Scholar lists over one hundred publications.
During his life, Greg touched so many people and changed so many lives for the better. It is hard to overestimate the number of companies, organizations, and individuals who were affected by him. He was a true renaissance man who had an unbounded curiosity and took an interest in everything and everyone. He loved poetry, he raised bees, made his own beer, was a continual problem solver, loved to work and he was always open for any kind of adventure.
He will be remembered for his incredible sense of humor and storytelling, for his caring and big-hearted nature and his willingness to help all animals and people, his ingenuity and creativity in dreaming up and physically creating all sorts of new ways to solve a problem - not just engineering and structural problems but also in business organizations and relationships and so much more.
Greg would like us to note that he currently holds no world records. However, in 2011, he was elected to the National Academy of Construction, and in that same year, together with Glenn Ballard, received the inaugural Pioneer Award from the Lean Construction Institute, in recognition of their exceptional contributions. In 2017, the International Group for Lean Construction initiated the Greg Howell Best Paper Award, and in 2019 commemorated his contributions to the international Lean community with dinner, speeches, and photographs.
He is survived by his wife of 40 plus years, Dana Langhorne Howell, his daughter Emily Thomsen, son-in-law Ian Thomsen, 3 grandchildren, his brother Kenneth Howell (Kris Slentz), and his two favorite dogs, Chispa and Furgus.
Victor Sanvido, 2020