Reid Middleton
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Reid Middleton
Civil, structural, survey, and planning services managed and delivered in an uncommonly personal way. Serving airport clients for more than 40 years, our team of engineers, planners, and surveyors understands the complexity involved in planning, project management, permitting, design, and construction of airfields and aviation structures. Citizens depend on functioning roadways, reliable public structures, and a cohesive infrastructure that works together to enable our busy and productive lives.

Because we live, work and play in the same cities and towns as our clients, we are passionate about roadway, utility infrastructure, and civic government design. People like to do business and work in safe, attractive settings, and Reid Middleton helps commercial clients achieve consumer satisfaction. We listen to our clients to gain an understanding of the needs of their future tenants and customers, then we permit and design projects from master plans to infrastructure and new commercial complexes.
Services
Reid Middleton provides civil and structural engineering, planning and permitting, and surveying services to public and private sector clients.
We work on projects as large as international airports and regional federal procurements and as small as a neighborhood park structure.
What ties all of our disciplines together is the way we think about our projects.
A building is more than concrete and steel.
An airfield is more than pavement and lighting.
And a pier is more than piling and decking.
Each one represents the needs of the people who use them every day.
Jim was the kind of guy who, on a family road trip, stopped the station wagon every time they came upon a sewer treatment plant, dam, or school construction site.
That's how much he loved engineering.
Jim hung out his shingle in 1953, and the City of Edmonds hired him to serve as municipal engineer.
Other Snohomish County cities soon followed suit.
Jim and LeRoy Middleton, who joined the firm the next year, had a way of developing lasting personal relationships that led to continued business.
That story repeated itself through the years.
In every productive relationship you establish that you can trust each other implicitly, and from that comes respect for one another.
We want to operate in that zone.
The heritage left by our founders was providing personal, quality design and consulting services to clients in an environment where people enjoy working.
This legacy lives on in each employee and is one of the most rewarding facets of our company.
We are all about family.
We create a working environment that celebrates our success, and we enjoy sharing that success with our staff, our clients and our family.
Every now and then opportunities come along that touch us personally, and we feel compelled to be a part of so profoundly, that our staff get involved.
STEM education is critically important to today's and tomorrow's economy.
Much has been written about this subject in leading publications and the need for more STEM educated people in the workforce in the future.
As much as we'd like to just.
Back in late 2004, we received a unique opportunity.
The American Institute of Architecture (AIA) Seattle branch was looking for structural engineers to help architects review for their licensing exams.
It's pretty common for people here to feel that coming to the office is like going home - it's part of your day; it's part of your life.
Working here, you'll have the opportunity to do many things.
People are encouraged to find new ways to do things and to look for opportunities that interest them.
There are stories of friendships borne of untold hours working together on massive projects, slogging through slug and caterpillar infested forests, mentoring of junior staff by senior staff, harrowing plane rides to remote airstrips, long summer days during construction season, walking under the wing of a 737 to watch the behavior of the pavement under its colossal load, middle of the night consultations to repair a school watermain, seeing snakes and screaming in the field while checking a base map, nearly going into the drink while examining piling during a storm in a tiny boat, and finding a hidden room in the basement of a 100 year-old building.
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