Water infrastructure and treatment plant design for municipal clients
Freese and Nichols operates a deep infrastructure consulting practice focused on water, wastewater, and stormwater systems across the U.S. The tech stack is dominated by water-specific hydraulic modeling (WaterGEMS, SewerGEMS, HEC-RAS, SWMM) paired with heavy CAD and BIM tooling (AutoCAD Civil 3D, Revit, MicroStation), revealing a firm built around design delivery and simulation rather than software or analytics. Hiring is engineering-heavy (135 of 166 open roles), with senior engineers representing the largest cohort — a pattern consistent with a project-driven consulting model where experienced designers drive delivery on large municipal contracts.
Notable leadership hires: Structural Lead, Cultural Resources Lead, Program Director, Transmission Utilities Lead
Freese and Nichols is a professional services firm founded in 1894 that plans, designs, and manages water infrastructure, wastewater treatment, and stormwater projects for municipal and regional clients across the United States, headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas. The firm operates across engineering, architecture, planning, environmental science, and construction services, with a track record including the first engineering/architecture firm to receive the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award. Current project focus spans treatment plants with capacities exceeding 350 million gallons per day, pump stations, resource recovery facilities, and master-planned infrastructure systems. The organization navigates complex public-sector procurement, regulatory compliance, and multi-discipline project delivery at scale.
WaterGEMS, SewerGEMS, HEC-RAS, and SWMM for hydraulic and stormwater modeling. Design delivery runs through AutoCAD Civil 3D, Revit, MicroStation, and ArcGIS for spatial analysis.
Treatment plants exceeding 350 million gallons per day, pump stations, resource recovery facilities, stormwater management and flood mitigation systems, water/wastewater transmission utilities, and master-planned municipal infrastructure.
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