From Gardener To Leader Of The S.A. Quantity Surveying Profession

27th May 2016

Dr Stephan Ramabodu has been elected as president of the Association of South African Quantity Surveyors. A Senior Lecturer at the University of the Free State (UFS), Dr Ramabodu's first practical experience of the QS profession was as student QS at B&L Bloemfontein while studying for a BSc Quantity Surveying degree. After graduation, he became a junior lecturer at the university and did  private work for contractors or QS firms to gain further experience. In 2006, he joined the construction consultancy, Davis Langdon, as a director and in 2008, left to start his own business, Ramabodu & Associates. He was also reappointed as lecturer at UFS where he completed a Master’s degree in 2005.

Thereafter, he was promoted to Senior Lecturer at UFS,  and also elected as Senior Vice- President of ASAQS, Fees Chairman of ASAQS, and Editorial Board Chairperson of Acta Structilia, a national journal for research articles in the physical and development sciences, published by the UFS Department of Quantity Surveying and Construction Management.

The new ASAQS president came from a particularly disadvantaged background and had to do gardening work to pay for his high school studies. Spurred  on by the  promise of a bursary if he managed to matriculate, the young Stephan managed just that and enrolled at UFS for a generic BSc degree which he changed to BSc QS studies after an uncle who worked on a building site  - and gave his young nephew money for transport and food - had introduced him to the Quantity Surveying profession.

Dr Ramabodu, who obtained a PhD at UFS in 2014, includes in his main aspirations as leader of ASAQS  transformation, including gender equality; marketing the profession; research; and  "providing the ultimate service to ASAQS members".