Women's Entrepreneurial Awards '06

Women’s Entrepreneurial Awards ’06: Diligence in Construction Field is Coffman’s Specialty

Steady gains are proof of skillful business acumen.

Colleen Coffman conveys a sanguine attitude of success.

When asked if being a woman in construction has affected business positively or negatively, the president and founder of Coffman Specialties Inc. replied frankly, “I have never seen it either way.”

As the behind-the-scenes organizer to with revenues of $88.25 million last year, Coffman said she just focuses on doing her job. Coffman Specialties ranks No. 1 on the San Diego Business Journal’s List Of Women-Owned Businesses in terms of gross 2005 revenues.

Like most successful businesses, Coffman Specialties did not develop overnight. In 1990, when her husband, Jim sold his construction company, Coffman’s 12-year employer, she mused that perhaps here was an opportunity for a new business venture of her own.

Based in a modest office in Pacific Beach, Coffman Specialties started off subcontracting for companies that just needed to made their goals to qualify for the federal Department of Transportations’ designation as a Disadvantaged Business Enterprise, or DBE.

Coffman capitalized on her construction experience, and although 1991 revenues showed only $320,000, she was on the road to success.

“Eventually the fact that we were a DBE was less of an issue compared to our performance,” said Coffman, 56. “We produced a very good product.”

During Coffman Specialties’ second year in business, company revenues grew to exceed $6.2 million. This marked the beginning of a steady upward trend for the contractors, whose revenues jumped to more than $30 million by 2000.

“Concrete paving has always been the meat of our existence,” she said. “We owe early and current success to concrete, and it can be a tough area in construction. You have to have a good eye for projects that may not have a lot of bidders.”

Coffman credits her husband for having this good eye, a knack that he now brings to the company that he now brings to the company since joining Coffman Specialties as project coordinator nine years ago.

Currently employing 249 people between the San Diego and Phoenix offices, Coffman knows that trusted employees are the key to this business.

“You work a lot, you give up a lot,” Coffman said. “But of course, you gain a great deal. You only dream of vacation days because there’s way too much work, and when the work lets up, you have to go find more. Only in the last few years have we allowed ourselves some days off, and that is due to find great people that we trust to leave in charge, combined with great training programs.

The concrete business, more so that any other subcontracting field, heavily depends on public projects such as the Maricopa County Flood Control District project that Coffman is spearheading. Despite the most talented and experienced of teams, concrete subs can suffer when public funding tightens.

For this reason, Coffman Specialties expanded it business into general contracting five years ago.

Confident in her ability to grow and adapt, Coffman has taken prudent steps towards diversifying the company’s market in the past year.

“We used Caltrans (California Department of Transportation) in the past, and now there are changes that have created some problems for us,” Coffman said. “Some districts are more difficult. We are branching out, exploring other markets such as irrigation districts to avoid too narrow a niche. Same path, more owners.

The diversification also has invited some new struggles, according to Coffman. Moving from sub to general contracting has created natural competition among other general contractors with whom Coffman has worked for years.

Having gotten her start with the help of many of these contractors, a big concern of Coffman’s has been maintaining good company ties following the changes.

“It was tricky because we still do some subcontracting work and didn’t want to burn bridges,” she said. “Fortunately, the relationships we’ve built over the years were strong enough to work out areas where each of us could bid for jobs.”

According to Coffman, the booming Phoenix market invites a lot of job opportunity, so her current focus includes expansion in the Arizona market.

Coffman hopes to continue producing more of the same.

“I wanted to keep focusing on what we’ve been doing. I have a team that I trust, I’ve found good people and feel good about the work that we do,” Coffman said.

Copyright San Diego Business Journal Aug 07, 2006

Top 10 Roads and Bridges Award

Top 10 Roads & Bridges Award

I-15 Express Lanes – San Diego

The San Diego Express is hitting the problems caused by congestion like a freight train. They have been reduced to nothing, thanks to the accelerated evolution of 21st century transportation management. When complete in 2012, the project will stretch 20 miles and carry such features as express and reversible lanes, direct-access ramps and electronic tolling. Sensors will monitor the flow of traffic to determine rates for congestion pricing, and a moveable barrier will allow for the contraction or expansion of northbound and southbound lanes.

Cost: $1.3 billion
Length: 20 miles
Designer: Caltrans
Contractors: Flatiron, Coffman Specialties, Transcore
Owner: Caltrans

Gomaco World All American Canal

All American Canal

The All-American Canal in southern California delivers approximately 3.1 million acre-feet (382,379 ha m) of the Colorado River to nine cities and 500,000 acres (202,343 ha) of agricultural land. The 82 mile (132 km) long canal was originally constructed in the 1930s and 1940s. It begins at the Imperial Dam on the Colorado River, about 20 miles (32 km) northeast of Yuma, Arizona, and extends south and west, following the Mexican/ American border.

The canal is currently unlined and substantial amounts of water are lost due to seepage, according to the Imperial Irrigation District, who operate and maintain the All-American Canal. They want to rebuild a section of the canal, with the new canal constructed parallel to the existing canal. The new concrete-lined canal will help minimize water lost because of seepage. Coffman Specialties, based out of San Diego, California, won the initial project bid to complete a portion of the new canal.

Continue reading “All American Canal”

Water & Wastewater

Water & Wastewater Top Projects Winner

Winner: All American Canal Lining Project

The All American Canal Lining Project (AACLP) is a congressionally authorized key element of the 2003 Quantification Settlement Agreement (QSA). Its goals are to reduce canal seepage losses and aid the state of California in meeting its QSA Colorado River water use limitations.

The lining project consists of constructing a concrete-lined canal parallel to and replacing a 23-mile section of the 82-mile earthen canal, which conveys Colorado River water to the Imperial and Coachella Valley. The project will conserve 67,700 acre-ft of water per year. Conserved water will be transferred to the San Diego County Water Authority and the San Luis Rey settlement parties.

The AACLP was constructed in three segments separated by three existing hydroelectric facilities along the canal. Successful bidders for the work included Kiewit Pacific and a joint venture of Ames and Coffman. Construction required more than 20 million cu yd of excavation and 2 million sq yd of concrete. Environmental mitigation included: 44 acres of new wetlands; 1,025 acres of flat-tailed horned lizard habitat; a 50-acre warm water game fish pond; and a 30-acre dune restoration

Implementing the AACLP included organizational, legal, environmental and construction challenges. Legal challenges included a nine-month work stoppage due to an injunction. Environmental constraints included significant compliance mitigation, a demanding physical desert environment and adjacency to high-use public sand dune areas and the Mexican border. The most significant construction challenge was the requirement that the flow of water through the canal could not be interrupted. The project was started in June 2007, and finish date will be in March 2010.

  • Owner: U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (Operated by the Imperial Irrigation District)
  • Designer: Bookman-Edmonston, a div. of GEI Consultants
  • Contractors: Parsons Water & Infrastructure, Inc., Kiewit Pacific Co., Ames/Coffman
  • Cost: $300 million
  • Size: 23 miles/sq ft