Malcolm Kinnaird

Malcolm Alexander Kinnaird AC DUniv FIEAust FTSE (19332014) was a South Australian engineer, joint founder of international engineering company Kinhill Engineering responsible for many major engineering projects including the Alice Springs to Darwin railway. Within South Australia, he was responsible for developing West Lakes, North Haven and the David Jones building.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]

Kinnaird was born and educated in Adelaide, graduating with a Bachelor of Engineering in 1959.[5]

In 1960, he founded Kinnaird Hill de Rohan and Young, (with Don Hill, Howard Young and Maurice de Rohan), which became Kinhill Pty Ltd and was acquired by Brown and Root / KBR (Kellog, Brown & Root) in 1997.[1][5]

In 2003 he led the "Kinnaird Review" of the defence procurement processes which laid out an integrated approach to the management of defence procurement.[5]

Kinnaird was the founder of the Cruising Yacht Club of South Australia.[1]

Boards

Source:[7]

  • Executive Chairman of Kinnaird Hill de Rohan and Young / Kinhill Pty Ltd
  • Chairman of Adelaide Brighton Ltd.
  • Chairman of Asia Pacific Transport Pty Ltd.
  • Chairman of FreightLink Pty Ltd.
  • Chairman of United Water International Pty Ltd.
  • Director of the Adelaide Community Healthcare Alliance Inc.
  • Director of Adelaide Brighton Ltd.
  • Director of FreightLink Pty Ltd.
  • Director of Macmahon Holdings Ltd.
  • Director of the National Electricity Market Management Company Ltd. (NEMMCO)
  • Director of United Water International Pty Ltd.
  • Member of the Defence Procurement Advisory Board

Recognition

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gollark: It is not. I am destroying this universe so that, via the anthropic principle, I will never be wrong.
gollark: Okay, I rechecked, apparently blahȩj are not to be discontinued and it was a mistake by Ikea.
gollark: I am absolutely not an expert, obviously, but still.

References

  1. "Malcolm Kinnaird, former South Australian of the Year, dies aged 80". , 26 September 2014, www.abc.net.au
  2. Officer of the Order of Australia (AO), 26 January 1991, It's an Honour, "For service to engineering and to the community."
  3. Centenary Medal, 1 January 2001, It's an Honour, "For service to Australian society through business"
  4. Companion of the Order of Australia (AC), 8 June 2009, "For service through the development of public policy in the defence procurement, infrastructure and energy sectors, and to business".
  5. Citation for Doctor of the University, www.adelaide.edu.au
  6. Citation for FIEAust, www.engineersaustralia.org.au
  7. Bloomberg
  8. AC notes, www.gg.gov.au
  9. SA Engineering Excellence Awards 2010, 16 September 2010, issuu.com/engineersaustralia
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