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Kenneth Gin Ying Doon

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ER. Kenneth Gin Ying Doon (born December 31, 1924) is a civil engineer and is the Founder and first President of the Institution of Engineers, Singapore (IES)[1]. He is a citizen of Singapore where he resides permanently. He was deputy director of Public Works in 1959; Acting Director of Public Works; General Manager of Public Utilities; Group Manager of Singapore Land & Investment Co Ltd; General Manager of Sentosa Development Corporation.[2][3][4] He was a member of the International Chamber of Commerce's International Tribunal as an Arbitrator and was elected as a Fellow of the Institution of Engineers, Australia since 1962; a Fellow of Civil Engineers, UK since 1965 and Chairman of the Advisory Board to the Institution of Civil Engineers beginning in 1968. In August 1963, he received the Public Administration Medal (Silver) Award. ER.[2][3][4]Gin was part of Singapore's Pioneers and his work in civil engineering laid the foundations for Singapore's progression from Third World to First[5] and in 1969 was described by The Straits Times as Singapore's Superman.[6]

Early life[edit]

Kenneth Gin was born on December 31, 1924. He was the third youngest of a family of 12 siblings. His father was Hoey Sing Goon and his mother was Woo Choy Yeuck and together they had 6 sons and 6 daughters. The father, Sing Goon, was the second eldest of three brothers and he was the one to migrate to Melbourne from Sun Woy, Kwantung, China. He opened a general store trading in Chinese groceries and Chinese Artifacts, silks and ivories in Little Bourke Street, Melbourne's renowned Chinatown. The firm's name was Quong Hie Shing and it was a member of the Victorian Chamber of Fruit and Vegetable Industries. This is where Sing Goon met the daughter of a practicing Herbalist across the street, Choy Yeuck, whom he soon married. Choy Yeuck choose to build a home in Hopetoun Road years before it became one of the most prestigious streets in Toorak, Melbourne.

Education[edit]

Kenneth Gin's father died soon after this 12th child when he had his second stroke. The burden was on two of the sons, Stanley Ying Wing and Mervyn Ying Geet to run the family business. Together, they managed to put Kenneth Gin through school. Gin attended Melbourne High School in South Yarra, Melbourne from 1939 to 1941 where he excelled in mathematics and physics. He then went on to be the only child in the family to attend university.[5] Kenneth Gin graduated with Honours in Civil Engineering from the University of Melbourne in 1945.[3]

"Engineering as a career was a natural choice for me as my mathematics was strong and I was always interested in why and how things worked." Kenneth Gin

Kenneth Gin's wife, son and daughter are also graduates of Melbourne University.

Career[edit]

Messrs, Scott & Furphy (1946 to 1955)[edit]

From graduating in 1945 to 1955, he worked in the consulting firm Messrs, Scott & Furphy[5] specializing in water supply, sewerage, drainage and municipal works. Gin established the Launceston Branch Office in 1949 and was the Tasmanian Branch Manager till 1952. He worked on the North Esk Regional Water Scheme project involvung river headworks, a tunnel spanning 43 miles of trunk water mains, gravity mains (a building-drainage system which drains by gravity into a building's sewer system) as well as a service reservoir, two pumping stations and rising mains (vertical pipes that rise from the ground to supply mains water to a building). After 1952, he returned to Melbourne as a Senior Engineer at the firm where we worked under the purview of one of the firm's partners on directed labour for water supply, sewerage schemes, roads and municipal works.

Hume Industries (Far East) Ltd. (1955 to 1959)[edit]

In June 1955, ER. Kenneth Gin made plans to move to Singapore for work. Singapore was a young colony that sought overseas-educated and skilled workers to develop its city. The then Australian Commissioner to Malaya (now called the Commissioner to Singapore) Claude Massey wrote in recommending ER. Gin to Singapore's Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

File:Letter from Claude Massey on Kenneth Gin.jpg

To whom it may concern.

It is with very great pleasure that I recommend Mr Kenneth Gin, of 51 Hopetoun Road, Toorak, Victoria, Australia, for some suitable position in Singapore.

Mr Gin will be marrying Miss Lee Wee Kit, a Singapore Chinese Girl who has done brilliantly in both Science nad Medicine at the Melbourne University. They both intend to go to Singapore soon after their wedding in Victoria.

Mr Gin is at present Senior Consulting Civil Engineer in Messrs Scott & Furphy in Melbourne.

Mr Gin is of very good character and his present position speaks for his ability.

(Claude Massey).

Gin arrived in Singapore in 1956 and was employed by Hume Industries (Far East) as a Project Engineer. He lead the design and supervised the manufacturing of prestressed concrete beams (PSC beams) and piles at factories and work sites. This lead him to work on erecting bridges ad designing steel buildings in Singapore and was the site engineer for manufacturing the PSC beams found in Merdeka Bridge of today. Gin left Hume Industries in 1959 to join Singapore's Public Works, now the current Public Utilities Board (PUB).

Public Works (Public Utilities Board) (1959 to 1969)[edit]

During Singapore's pre-indepence years, Singapore had to take a US$600 million loan from the World Bank for infrastructure development. The World Bank approved the loan on one condition, that ER. Kenneth Gin would oversee the projects that the loan would fund and so in 1959, Gin joined Singapore's Public Works as Deputy Director.[2] His staff consisted of 70 engineers, 30 architects and a further 4,800 in labour strength. He task was to develop and maintain a young Singapore's roads, highways, sewerage, drainage, schools, hospitals and public buildings, airport and other works. It was during this period that the Pan Island Expressway (an island long expressway connecting the west and east side of Singapore) and the Mass Rapid Transit System (Singapore's first metro system) were initiated. In 1962, Gin was appointed to Acting Director of Public Works and also took on projects on Singapore's traffic planning. In 1966, Public Works was renamed to the current Public Utilities Board of Singapore (PUB). That same year, Gin was appointed as General Manager of PUB and developed Singapore's electrical grid, power generation, water supply and treatment works, gas production and distribution for a population that had risen to over 2 million. Under his leadership, PUB also grew in size to 140 professional engineers, with a total labour strength of 7,500 and together they built the new Jurong Power Station and the Kota Tinggi Waterworks in Johor Bahru.

Singapore Land & Investment Co. Ltd. (1970 to 1972)[edit]

Beginning in 1970, Gin became the Group General Manager of the Singapore[4] where he had a hand in office and residential development as well as hotel extensions. His investigations and work looked into possible land developments and management of Singapore Land properties. In 1970, he was an expert witness at a court case re allegation of the supply of sub-standard asbestos cement pipes to the Public Works Department of Malaysia. In 1971, ER. Gin had his first taste of Arbitration in Engineering Disputes as sole Arbitrator for a contractor's claim for SGD$375,000 (SGD$1.4 million which is US$1.03 million in today's money) for additional work from a Singaporean Statutory Board. He was the over-all in charge of the construction of the Cuscaden House Hotel extension to 140 rooms, the Woolerton Park Development of 30 houses and 72 flats and the initial design for the Clifford Centre, a 29-story building of 550,000 sq.ft. in gross area located in Singapore's Central Business District.

Sentosa Development Corporationn (1973 to 1975)[edit]

In 1973, Gin became the General Manager of Sentosa Development Corporation[2], a government statutory board. He was in charge of the development of the island off the south coast of Singapore's Central Area, Sentosa. Originally known as Pulau Blakang Mati, the island was once used as a British base and a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp during World War II before it was renamed and slated for development as a popular tourist destination in 1972. Once a small hilly island covered in tropical rainforest, it has now become a popular tourist attraction of Singapore that receives more than 20 million visitors a year. Gin's work covered infrastructural works such as roads, sewerage, drainage, utility supplies, gun museum, monorail system, the first 18-hole golf course on the island, a 0.8 mile long lagoon and a Coralarium. The Coralarium complex was the first such attraction in Asia and its main building had a 18-metre-tall coralon tower with another building housing a 60-metre-long continuous display corridor of various corals and seashells. It was opened in 1974 but its coralon tower was dismantled in 1983 due to safety concerns over its structural stability.

Consultant Engineer (1976 to 2000)[edit]

After 1975, ER. Gin set up his own consulting engineer practice.[3][4]In 1978, he was the project director for the Australian consulting engineering firm of Kuttner Collins International where he was in charge of an international project team on the Railway Feasibility Study for the Malaysian Government. From 1979 to 2000, Gin continued with his own consulting engineer practice and his main projects were for Mobil Oil Singapore Pte Ltd (current ExxonMobil in Singapore). He worked on oil refinery projects for Mobil Oil Singapore totalling US$1.88 billion (which is US$6.6 billion) in assets including a Continuous Catalytic Reformer for creating blending stocks for high-octane gasoline from naphthas distilled from crude oil. Other projects included a residual upgrading project in 1980, a Merox Unit in 1980, a hydrocracker in 1981, a 1 million barrel storage tank at Pulau Pesek in 1981, a 11,000 Bbl (oil barrel) liquid petroleum gas sphere in 1987, a US$1.05 billion continuous catalytic converter in 1991 and a lube base oil project in 1995. These projects were located on the cluster of islands that were joined together by land reclamation (which completed in 2009) to become Jurong Island, Singapore's largest industrial complex whose refineries process 1,300,000 barrels of crude oil daily. Meanwhile, the ExxonMobil petrochemical complex eventually became the company's largest integrated refining and petrochemical complex in the world.

Arbitration (1976 to 2000)[edit]

While working as a consultant engineer, ER. Gin also acted as an Arbitrator, expert witness and as a source of engineering opinion in many engineering disputes in Singapore and the region. In 1976, ER. Gin worked on a dredging contractor's claim for US$4.9 million (which is US$22 million in today's money) from a Singaporean Statutory Board. In 1977, he worked on a re allegation of professional negligence and quantum of fees on abandonment of work by clients in Singapore. From 1977 to 1978 he was also an expert witness for a dredging contractor's claim against a main contractor for additional work. In 1979, ER. Gin was appointed to be a member of the International Chamber of Commerce International Tribunal as an Arbitrator. In 1979, He arbitrated a sub-contractor's claim against an internal contractor for US$2.98 million (which is US$10.5 million in today's money). In 1984, he arbitrated a glass producer's insurance claim against a collective of insurance companies with a full award of US$1.4 million ( which is US$3.4 million in today's money). In 1988, he was the sole arbitrator at a civil engineering contractor's claim for US$1.18 million (US$2.55 million in today's money) against a shipyard. In 1995, he was the sole arbitrator at a contractor's claim for US$543,000 (US$0.9 million in today's money) for variations on building work and was able to attain a private settlement with 3 days of hearings. From 1996 to 1997, ER. Gin acted as an expert witness for a major insurance company for claims for severe damage to private houses and a major earth embankment failure. In 1997, ER. Gin was the sole arbitrator for a piling sub-contractor's claim against a developer for alleged wrongful termination of contract. In 1998, ER. Gin was the sole arbitrator for a developer's claim for US$600,000 for liquidated damages opposed by a contractor counter claiming of unpaid work, loss of profit and return of performance bond monies. From 1998 to 1999, ER. Gin was a co-arbitrator for a US$12 million (US$18.8 million in today's money) claim for additional professional fees for extra work outside the scope of a major consultancy contract. In April 1999 he was the sole arbitrator for a sub-contractors claim for US$662,000 (US$1.02 million in today's money) from a main contractor for variation works. He arbitrated a mutual settlement after a partial hearing of 5 days.

Awards and memberships[edit]

In 1963, ER. Gin was awarded the Pinggat Pentadbiran Awam, the Public Administration Medal - Silver for his work in Singapore's Public Service. Thereafter, ER. Gin held many leadership positions during Singapore's Formative years after Independence in 1965. From 1964 to 1966 ER. Gin was also President of the Board of Architects, Singapore and from was also a member of the Master Plan and Building Control Committees and Industrial Facilities Committee of the Economic Development Board of Singapore. Only July 1966, ER. Gin founded the Institution of Engineers, Singapore and was its first President from 1966 to 1968. Additionally, from 1967 to 1968, he was a member of the Jurong Town Corporation (Singapore's state owned real estate company) and from 1964 to 1967 was a member of the People's Association of Singapore (a statutory board that oversees neighbourhood grassroots communities and social organisations). From October 1972 to 1997, ER. Gin also held the position of Chairman of the Advisory Committee to the Institution of Civil Engineers in Singapore. He was a member since 1966. From 1968 to 1987, he was Convenor of the Membership Committee in Singapore for the Institution of Engineers, Australia. In 1967, he was chairman of the Singapore delegation to the World Power Conference in Tokyo, Japan. In 1968, he was chairman of teh 11th session of the sub-committee on Energy Resources and Electric Power held in Singapore.[7] In 1975, he was senior Vice-President of the Metropolitan Young Men Christians Association (YMCA) in Singapore. From 1979 to 1983, he was the director of International Mapping Co. Pte. Ltd. and was council member in the Singapore Institute of Arbitrators in 1981, 1982, 1985 and 1986. In 1987, he became the President of the Singapore Institute of Arbitrators. From 1988 onward, ER. Gin became a member of the Strata Titles Board of Singapore. In 1993, he was appointed as a member of the Panel of Accredited Arbitrators by the Singapore International Arbitration Centre and in 1997 was further appointed to the Panel of Mediators by the Singapore Mediation Centre.

Personal life[edit]

ER. Kenneth Gin was born to Hoey Sing Goon and Woo Choy Yeuck and was part of a family of 6 sons and 6 daughters.

Sons and Daughter of the Family
No. Name Year of Birth
1 Albert Ying Ack 1906
2 Winifred Gim Lin 1908
3 Percival Ying Toi 1910
4 Marguerita Gim Goot 1912
5 Stanley Ying Wing 1914
6 Mervyn Ying Geet 1916
7 Lorna Gim Gnor 1918
8 Joyce Gim Mee 1920
9 Phyllis Gim Mouy 1922
10 Kenneth Ying Doon 1924
11 Brian Ying Utt 1926
12 Babara Gim Farr 1930

Kenneth Gin married Dr. Wee Kit Lee in 1956 at Wesley Church.[3] 200 guests attended their reception was held at the University of Melbourne Union House before leaving together for Singapore for a second traditional reception.[3] They have one one son and two daughters.

References[edit]

  1. "Milestones of Institution of Engineers, Singapore (IES)". The Institution of Engineers, Singapore. Retrieved 28 January 2020. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Tian, Er A/Prof Chew Yong (1996-03-01), English: Interview with IES Founder President Er. Kenneth Gin, retrieved 2020-01-27
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Matthews, Shirley Ho, Eliah Castiello, Zac (2013-10-01), The Melbourne Graduate, retrieved 2020-01-27
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Matthews, Shirley Ho, Eliah Castiello, Zac (2013-10-01), The Melbourne Graduate, retrieved 2020-01-27
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 "The Singapore Engineer June 2016". Issuu. Retrieved 2020-01-27.
  6. Jshutler (1969-03-27), A World Hunt for a Superman to Run Utilities Board, retrieved 2020-01-27
  7. Raghavan, V. R. (1968-06-08), English: Letter from V.R. Raghavan to Mr. K.Y.D. Gin, retrieved 2020-01-27


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