Digital Construction

Mentoring women in BIM: a two-way street to success

Image of two women climbing to illustrate mentoring
Image: Ammentorp | Dreamstime.com
To mark International Women's Day, our first feature today focuses on the relationship between a mentor and mentee from Women in BIM. Mentoring has been a successful initiative for Women in BIM. How does the mentor/mentee relationship work? What do both parties get out of it? BIMplus found out by speaking to Elaine Lewis, MD of Cadventure and non-executive director of nima, and Kinga Ciesielska, a BIM information manager at Aecom.

With a background in business and an MBA from Cranfield, Lewis joined her husband’s digital construction software business Cadventure and became MD in 2013. She says: “I got involved in mentoring via a Construction Industry Council event six years ago, which I really enjoyed. When Women in BIM chair and founder Rebecca De Cicco asked me to become a mentor, I jumped at the chance. Kinga is my third mentee and I really enjoy the work we do together. I met her in June last year.”

Ciesielska started work experience in the shipbuilding industry in Poland – “an all-male environment”, she remarks. Keen to learn English and to expand her horizons, she moved to the UK 10 years ago and started working in production at a publishing house.

“My career in BIM started with Airsculpt, using SketchUp and Autodesk to draw shade sail blinds for clients’ conservatories,” she reveals. “Keen to progress to a new challenge, I moved into the rail sector, joining Aecom, with responsibility for 3D design of overhead line equipment.”

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