Kevin Hansen, P.G., LEED AP Joins Staff of Landmark JCM
On: February 17, 2011
Filed Under: Member News
New Castle, Del., February 14, 2011 LandmarkJCM president, Bruce J. Tease, P.E., announced that Kevin Hansen, a Professional Geologist in Delaware and Pennsylvania and a LEED Accredited Professional with 28 years of professional and innovative business experience, will join the New Castle‐based integrated engineering and sciences consulting firm of LandmarkJCM. Mr. Hansen’s leadership in Brownfield redevelopment, sustainable design, water
resources, renewable energy and web‐based media will combine to give clients an advantage with leading‐edge sustainable redevelopment and water resources opportunities. Mr. Hansen has considerable experience identifying project financing approaches that merge public and private sources.
LandmarkJCM’s growth in fully‐integrated engineering‐and‐sciences approaches allows it to provide a wide array of client benefits in‐house. Mr. Hansen’s capabilities round‐out its expansion into the sustainable redevelopment, innovative technologies and water resources arenas. These areas are closely tied to critical U.S. infrastructure needs now ‐ and these needs are expected to grow in the future. The addition of new capabilities for media/web‐based communications adds new dimensions to LandmarkJCM’s ability to support its clients in innovative and effective ways.
Mr. Hansen was awarded a Master of Science degree in Geology in 1987 from the University of Delaware, where he earned a Bachelors of Science in Geology with Cum Laude honors. He was recognized by the U. S. Green Building Council in 2008 as a LEED Accredited Professional and has performed green design consulting on many projects in multiple countries, and has extensive Brownfield redevelopment experience. He specializes in Brownfield redevelopment, hydrogeology (especially in fractured bedrock), groundwater and soil remediation, environmental assessments, environmental modeling/GIS, and Green design.
Mr. Hansen has participated in many humanitarian projects emphasizing the benefits of science and engineering to the public. He began his career working as a petroleum geophysicist for an oil production company in New Orleans. In 1993, he was the lead inventor credited with a U.S. patent for “Apparatus and Method for Decontaminating Aquifers.”





