08 - Utilities
Match capital plans to engineers who understand your territory.
Only 150,000 civil engineers are actively stamping in the U.S., covering over $400 billion in public construction annually. Civil Match helps utilities reach the right verified civil engineers faster.
01 - ROLE IN THE NETWORK
How utilities show up in the engineer's network.
Civil Match lets utilities bring project requirements into a secure network, define service-territory and technical constraints, and get matched to NCEES-verified civil engineers working in their area.
- Define utility-specific project need and regulatory constraints
- Find engineers, architects, and planners with relevant utility experience
- Keep ratepayer accountability visible across the project network
- Coordinate with municipal and community stakeholders on shared infrastructure
02 - WHAT YOU BRING
What you bring
- Capital project pipeline and rate-base context
- Utility-specific regulatory and reliability constraints
- Asset history and territory boundaries
- Long-cycle infrastructure responsibility
What you get back
- Better-fit engineering, planning, and design partners
- A clearer view of who's working in your service area
- Earlier alignment between capital plan and delivery network
03 - PROJECT PHASES
Where utilities connect to the work.
01
Plan
02
Design
03
Procure
04
Construct
05
Monitor
04 - ALL ROLES
Explore the rest of the Civil Match network.
12 - JOIN CIVIL MATCH
Join Civil Match
Match project needs with:
- Project needs matched around trust
- Verified civil engineers matched faster
- Municipalities, utilities, community districts, and architects connected to trusted project partners
- A safe, fast, secure network that protects your project data
- Cross-firm teams that scale around the right specialist for each phase
Match civil engineers to project needs faster.
Connect. Introduce. Build. Deliver. Return.
Civil engineers work in teams across firms, not confined to one firm's staff. Civil Match helps the right specialist form around each phase without the overhead of one large bench.