Helen Warnock鈥檚 engineering career came as a surprise to her, having studied English literature before falling in love with the railway.
罢丑颈蝉听, Helen, an infrastructure maintenance depot manager on the South East route, joined nine colleagues working in and supporting engineering to inspire girls and young women to explore dynamic and varied聽careers聽in engineering:
鈥淔or me, it is about the people.鈥
We talk to Helen about funfair rides, finding inspiration in the people around her and why now is the best time to pursue a career in engineering…
Do you remember the first thing you ever built?
A little seesaw. I used to make little funfair rides for my sisters鈥 I鈥檇 got an old tricycle, I鈥檇 got a plank and worked out if you put it right in the middle it sorted of balanced and we鈥檇 take turns and had our own little seesaw.
What led you to join the railway?
I went to university and did degrees in English literature鈥 I saw a job on the railway and thought I鈥檇 get a short-term job鈥 but I just fell in love with it. I fell in love with working outside. It was totally different from anything I鈥檇 done before.
You just fall in love with it. You fall in love with the people, you fall in love with the fact that every day is different, you fall in love with the fact you get the chance to learn things. I was motivated by wanting to learn things. The railway gave me that – they sent me to college, to university to do engineering.
Which project are you most proud of?
A wheel timber at London Bridge鈥 We had to do it from scratch. It was one of the first jobs where I did everything, from the surveying to specification to making sure all of the calculations were right, to going out with the team to deliver it.
Why is now the best time to be work in engineering?
Because of the sheer scale and opportunity that鈥檚 available out there. There鈥檚 been, even in my career鈥 so much innovation. We鈥檝e moved so far ahead with things like safety and the mechanics of how we do things. The opportunities to develop are huge, there are more schemes coming out onto the railway, whether you want to be involved in the digital side of things or mechanical side of things in renewals. It鈥檚 mind-blowing how much opportunity there is out there for everyone.
What鈥檚 the best piece of advice you鈥檝e ever received?
Everybody is different.
What advice would you give to a young person pursuing a career in engineering?
Don鈥檛 give up. The opportunities are there, the industries are crying out for good engineers. If you apply yourself鈥 there鈥檚 so much opportunity to get out there.
What would you say to a young person who doesn鈥檛 think a career in engineering is for them?
A career in engineering is not often sold properly to them鈥 working with big trains – that鈥檚 never really portrayed. We don鈥檛 do a fantastic job in selling the excitement, the comradery, the part where you get to see a project from beginning to end where you鈥檙e really part of delivering something, not just for yourself 鈥 for people, for passengers. It has such a wide impact on everything.
Why would you say STEM is interesting and exciting?
The thing that makes it interesting is how it鈥檚 applied, what you do, the people you meet, the impact you have. People see engineering as very focussed, that it鈥檚 not creative but actually, it is hugely a creative part of the industry.
You get to build things, you get to interact with lots and lots of different people form lots of different disciplines so it won鈥檛 be just the discipline you鈥檙e taught about in your engineering discipline. If you come in as a track person, you鈥檒l have to liaise with [signals and telecoms], you鈥檒l have to work with electrification ,you might want to talk to the geo-technical teams and you鈥檝e got to make something work together – that is what makes engineering interesting.
Who is your inspiration?
It鈥檚 important to find pieces of inspiration in the people around you. I鈥檝e got fantastic team leaders who work for me who are super inspiring鈥 who really deliver the job; they do it really well.
What does the railway mean to you?
It鈥檚 fundamentally about the people in it鈥 The thing that really keeps people in the industry is other people鈥 It鈥檚 the comradery, that sense of family. In a way, that鈥檚 what the railway means to me. It鈥檚 something that鈥檚 much bigger than one individual or a single-discipline career鈥 When you understand the enormity of what it does and you feel part of that, that is what the railway means to me.