Facilities & Construction Project Manager
Description
This role is ideal for candidates with education and early career experience in construction management, engineering, architecture, facilities, or related fields who enjoy organization, problem-solving, and managing multiple priorities.
Schedule:
Core business hours for this position are Mon-Fri, between the hours of 8:00-5:00 with flexibility to attend meetings outside core business hours on occasion.
- Single or Family Health Insurance with discounted premium rates for wellness program participation.
- 401k with immediate matching (50% on the dollar up to 7% of pay) + additional annual Profit Sharing
- Flexible Paid Time Off Program (29 days off/year)
- Medical and Dependent Care Flex Spending Accounts
- Life insurance, Long Term Disability Coverage, Short Term Disability Coverage, Dental Insurance, etc.
What You’ll Do:
- Assist with maintenance, renovation, and small construction projects across clinic locations
- Help develop project scopes, schedules, budgets, and timelines
- Coordinate contractors, vendors, engineers, architects, and internal departments
- Monitor project progress, documentation, costs, and deadlines
- Support capital improvement initiatives and facility upgrades
- Review drawings and layouts and assist with space planning activities
- Utilize project management systems, maintenance software, and digital tracking tools
- Help ensure projects meet safety, quality, and regulatory standards
- Coordinate work to minimize disruption to clinic operations and patient care
- Planning, management, and execution of multiple facilities-related projects simultaneously, including maintenance upgrades, space renovations, building system replacements, and minor grounds and construction projects.
- Development of project scopes, schedules, budgets, cost estimates, and work plans from inception through closeout.
- Coordination with architects, engineers, contractors, inspectors, vendors, and internal stakeholders to ensure project alignment and success.
- Track project progress, manage change orders, monitor costs, and mitigate risks to minimize delays and cost overruns.
- Ensure quality control, safety compliance, and proper documentation throughout all phases of each project.
- Partner closely with facilities and maintenance teams to prioritize and schedule capital, preventive maintenance, and major repair projects.
- Ensure projects are coordinated with operational needs and minimize disruption to clinical, business, or operational activities.
- Support long-term facilities planning by identifying asset improvement, lifecycle replacement, and infrastructure enhancement opportunities.
- Utilize computerized maintenance management system (CMMS) and maintenance project management software to manage work orders, capital projects, assets, schedules, and reporting.
- Review and interpret technical drawings to ensure accuracy and coordination. Use industry-standard CAD tools—including Autodesk Revit, AutoCAD, and SketchUp to make minor revisions and develop draft layouts for space planning.
- Maintain accurate project budgets, schedules, dashboards, and documentation using digital tools such as Excel, project management platforms, and document management systems.
- Identify opportunities to improve facilities project tracking, building utilization, space management, reporting, and standard operating procedures through better use of technology.
- Serve as a key liaison between Facilities, Operations, Finance, IT, and external project partners.
- Provide day-to-day direction and coordination for contractors, consultants, and vendors assigned to projects.
Physical Aspects:
Climbing - Ascending or descending ladders, stairs, scaffolding, ramps, poles and the like, using feet and legs and/or hands and arms. Body agility is emphasized. This factor is important if the amount and kind of climbing required exceeds that required for ordinary locomotion.
Balancing - Maintaining body equilibrium to prevent falling when walking, standing or crouching on narrow, slippery or erratically moving surfaces. This factor is important if the amount and kind of balancing exceeds that needed for ordinary locomotion and maintenance of body equilibrium.
Stooping - Bending body downward and forward by bending spine at the waist. This factor is important if it occurs to a considerable degree and requires full use of the lower extremities and back muscles.
Kneeling - Bending legs at knee to come to a rest on knee or knees.
Crouching - Bending the body downward and forward by bending leg and spine.
Crawling - Moving about on hands and knees or hands and feet.
Reaching - Extending hand(s) and arm(s) in any direction.
Standing - Particularly for sustained periods of time.
Walking - Moving about on foot to accomplish tasks, particularly for long distances.
Pushing - Using upper extremities to press against something with steady force in order to thrust forward, downward or outward.
Pulling - Using upper extremities to exert force in order to draw, drag, haul or tug objects in a sustained motion.
Lifting - Raising objects from a lower to a higher position or moving objects horizontally from position-to-position. This factor is important if it occurs to a considerable degree and requires the substantial use of the upper extremities and back muscles.
Fingering - Picking, pinching, typing or otherwise working, primarily with fingers rather than with the whole hand or arm as in handling.
Grasping - Applying pressure to an object with the fingers and palm.
Feeling - Perceiving attributes of objects, such as size, shape, temperature or texture by touching with skin, particularly that of fingertips.
Talking - Expressing or exchanging ideas by means of the spoken word. Those activities in which they must convey detailed or important spoken instructions to other workers accurately, loudly or quickly.
Hearing - Perceiving the nature of sound with or without correction. Ability to receive detailed information through oral communication and to make fine discriminations in sound, such as when making fine adjustments on machined parts.
Vision - 20 / 40 or better in the best eye with or without correction.
Repetitive Motions - Substantial movements (motions) of the wrists, hands and/or fingers.
Medium Work - Exerting up to 50 pounds of force occasionally, and/or up to 20 pounds of force frequently, and/or 10 pounds force constantly to move objects.
Environmental Conditions:
Both Inside & Outside Environmental Conditions - Activities occur inside and outside.
Medical Associates Clinic & Health Plans is an equal opportunity employer committed to a diverse and inclusive workforce. Applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, pregnancy, age, national origin, marital status, parental status, disability, veteran status, or other distinguishing characteristics of diversity and inclusion, or any other protected status. Please view Equal Employment Opportunity Posters provided by OFCCP https://www.eeoc.gov/poster
