Senior Risk Analyst
Arcadis
United States
Andrew Bates is a Senior Risk Analyst at Arcadis, bringing more than 30 years of diverse construction experience managing multi-million-dollar projects across commercial, healthcare, academic, and military construction sectors.
At Arcadis, Andrew leads qualitative and quantitative risk assessments, facilitating risk workshops and preparing reports for multiple transportation and building-related projects. He manages risk assessments on capital projects, reviews project scope and design documentation, performs base cost and schedule validation, develops Monte Carlo simulations to quantify risks, and leads risk mitigation workshops.
Andrew’s career includes serving as Airfield Design Chief and Project Manager for the United States Air Force, where he supervised five engineers and oversaw military construction projects valued over $8 million. He also served as Performance Oversight Manager for the renovation of the LIRR Train Hall at NY Penn Station with Group PMx.
Since 2009, Andrew has served as an Adjunct Professor at NYU Tandon School of Engineering in the Department of Civil and Urban Engineering, teaching graduate-level Risk Analysis and other courses in BIM, Infrastructure Planning, and Construction Planning.
To connect with Andrew, please check his LinkedIn profile.
Risk professionals consistently promote integrating risk management into phase gate decision points—yet construction teams frequently fail to adopt a risk mindset and rarely prioritize funding. The consequences? Teams forfeit measurable gains like reduced cost and schedule variance, better contingency planning, and clearer trade-off decisions throughout the project lifecycle.
If you’ve struggled to get buy-in for comprehensive risk management, you’re not alone. But what if there’s a way to prove value first, then scale your program once leadership is convinced?
Chris Carson and Andrew Bates from Arcadis recommend treating risk as two complementary efforts: mitigating negative risks (threats) and exploiting positive risks (opportunities). Here’s the key difference: mitigating threats typically requires allocated budgets and dedicated resources, while opportunity management—identifying, prioritizing, and acting on upside risks—can often be handled by project controls staff working under Project Management direction. This minimizes incremental cost while ensuring opportunities are actively pursued.
The breakthrough strategy? Use opportunity-led risk management as your entry point. Start by identifying and capturing positive risks to demonstrate short-term, tangible value. Once the construction management team sees results, you can scale into a full risk management program with far less resistance. Arcadis has achieved great success with this approach when clients initially resist comprehensive risk processes—beginning with early systemic risk management in the Pre-Design Phase, then transitioning to project-specific risk management as design evolves.
This session will show you how to turn skeptics into believers by proving value through opportunities first, then building the comprehensive program your projects deserve.
Here’s what you’ll gain by attending this session:
Presentation Category: Risk Analysis / Management
Competency Level: Intermediate