UW Architectural Engineering Alumnus Michael Svoboda Honored with Bowen Prize for Great Builders
Published November 17, 2025

Michael Svoboda, second from right, presented his $50,000 Bowen Prize award to representatives of UW’s Construction Management Program during a ceremony in April. Francois Jacobs, the Roy L. and Caryl L. Cline Distinguished Professor of Civil and Architectural Engineering and Construction Management at UW, is pictured on the far right. (Associated General Contractors of America Photo)
Michael Svoboda, a member of the University of Wyoming class of 2013, has been honored
with the inaugural Bowen Prize for Great Builders for his critical role in the planning
and construction of the Broadway Bridge Replacement Project in Nashville, Tenn.
The award is issued by the Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) Education
and Research Foundation to honor the under-sung heroes of the construction industry.
The award is given to “the leaders with boots on the ground, who, day in and day out,
managed that critical construction project from planning through execution,” according
to the AGC website.
Svoboda met the AGC’s criteria with flying colors, demonstrating excellence in leadership,
customer service, job site safety and innovation in construction methods in his role
as project manager at Kiewit Infrastructure South Co.
“In today’s great builders, we see state-of-the-art engineering, never-before-seen
construction methods, leader-management at the forefront and a deep commitment to
service to the community,” says the AGC. “The Bowen Prize seeks to recognize those
builders who are most responsible for extraordinary contributions to the built environment.”
The Broadway Bridge Replacement Project represents an extraordinary achievement. The
$71.8 million project presented multiple unique challenges, including a remarkably
short time frame to replace one of the main thoroughfares into Nashville, which spans
busy downtown city streets and five active CSX rail lines. Svoboda’s team was allowed
an eight-week closure to both demolish the original 75-year-old bridge and erect the
new one. However, they completed the massive undertaking two weeks ahead of schedule
without a single safety incident over the course of 110,000 work hours.
This impressive feat was made possible through outstanding planning and the use of
novel techniques, including 3D plans and the construction and installation of precast
concrete panels, allowing the new bridge to be built quickly with minimal disruptions.
The substructure was built within one foot of the existing bridge while both the high-traffic
highway and railway remained open. Demolition and addition of the superstructure proceeded
during the closure.
Svoboda’s team also had to strategize around existing telecommunications lines and
very tight quarters for guiding new sections into place, while maintaining access
to popular bridge-adjacent hotels on both ends. This required extensive coordination
with multiple stakeholders to ensure minimal impacts on essential services.
This isn’t the first such complex project for Svoboda, whose 12-year track record
with Kiewit also includes emergency bridge repairs over the Nolichucky River in eastern
Tennessee after Hurricane Helene. So, he was well-prepared for the project, both by
his professional experience and by his UW education in architectural engineering.
Svoboda credits his professors at UW with helping him find his current career path
and get connected to Kiewit.
“Aside from just a great academic program, I think the culture of the University of
Wyoming’s College of Engineering helped prepare me for my current career,” Svoboda
says. “There are a work ethic and passion for continuous improvement, which I think
gets instilled in students who graduate from the college.”
Not only does Svoboda embody that work ethic, which will inspire many future students,
but he designated UW’s Construction Management program in the Department of Civil
and Architectural Engineering and Construction Management as the recipient of his
$50,000 Bowen Prize award. Donating the award funds to a construction education program
of the awardee’s choice is stipulated by the AGC, and the support will help one of
UW’s newest programs make the most of its robust growth.
“The CM program has decided to require all construction management students to engage
in a minimum of one internship during their course of study,” says Francois Jacobs,
the Roy L. and Caryl L. Cline Distinguished Professor of Civil and Architectural Engineering
and Construction Management at UW. “This funding will be used to strengthen the relationship
between companies and our students, and to also expand the internship platform in
the program.”
Svoboda, who has continued his involvement at UW by serving on the Construction Management
Industry Advisory Board, says it was a no-brainer to support his alma mater.
“It was just the natural choice,” Svoboda says. “Being able to see what the program has done in a short time has been truly amazing to witness, and it is exciting to contribute in whatever little way I can. Once a Cowboy, always a Cowboy.”

