What looks effortless from the outside is almost always the result of everything that happened before it. The race ran clean. The building turned over on time. The finished product with no surprises.
That's the part Ryan Leach understands, and it's the part Power Design is built around. We're proud to have Ryan as a Power Design partner because the way he approaches his craft mirrors how we approach ours.
Ryan is clear, fast is the result. The simulator work, the setup decisions, and the debrief after every session are what determine the outcome. By the time the green flag drops, the work is already done.
At Power Design, our engineering, VDC, and field teams engage early, coordinating a plan before trades hit the floor, resolving conflicts in the model before they become problems in the field, and building a plan solid enough to execute with precision.
A racecar is dozens of systems tuned to one goal. If any one of them is out of alignment, the whole program suffers. The best teams understand that every component must work together.
We self-perform electrical, mechanical, plumbing, systems technologies, and energy not as separate scopes, but as one integrated team working towards the same schedule and the same goal. Our trades don't hand off to each other; they work alongside each other.
That alignment means fewer conflicts, faster decisions, and projects that finish as planned.
Ryan was deliberate about who he put his name next to. He wanted a team that prepares the same way, holds the same standard, and understands that what you do before race day is what determines the result. For us, every person on a project — from the VDC engineer coordinating in the model to the foreman running the floor — owns the outcome. Not just their scope. The outcome. That accountability is what keeps the standard from moving. The wins look clean because of the work behind them.