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4/3/2025
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President, vice president, and board members elected The American Concrete Institute (ACI) announces its 2025-2026 president, vice president, and four board members. Maria Juenger has been elected to serve as president of the Institute for 2025-2026, and Matthew R. Sherman has been elected ACI vice president for a two-year term. Additionally, four members have been elected to serve on the ACI Board of Direction, each for three-year terms: Michael Ahern, Mary Beth Deisz Hueste, Xiomara Sapón-Roldán, and Kimberly Waggle Kramer. President Maria Juenger, FACI, is a Professor and the Ernest Cockrell, Jr. Centennial Chair in Engineering #2 in the Fariborz Maseeh Department of Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX,. Juenger’s teaching and research focus on materials used in civil engineering applications. She primarily examines chemical issues in cement-based materials, including phase formation in cement clinkering, hydration chemistry of cements and supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs), and chemical deterioration processes in concrete. Her current research efforts emphasize the interaction of cement-based materials and the environment. This work encompasses the development and characterization of cementitious systems with lower carbon dioxide and energy footprints, as well as the capacity of cementitious materials to produce or remove airborne and waterborne pollutants. Juenger is a Fellow of ACI and the American Ceramic Society (ACerS). She is a member of numerous ACI committees and has received several awards from ACI for her research, teaching, and service, including the 2009 Walter P. Moore, Jr. Faculty Achievement Award, 2010 ACI Young Member Award for Professional Achievement, 2011 Wason Medal for Materials Research, 2018 Delmar L. Bloem Distinguished Service Award, and 2020 ACI Concrete Sustainability Award. She has also received a Faculty Early CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation and was the 2024 ACerS Cements Division Della Roy Lecturer. She is on the Editorial Boards of both Cement and Concrete Research and Cement and Concrete Composites. Juenger received her BS in chemistry from Duke University, Durham, NC, USA, and her PhD in materials science and engineering from Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA. After completing her PhD, she was a Postdoctoral Researcher in civil engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA, before coming to The University of Texas at Austin. Vice President Matthew R. Sherman, FACI, is Senior Principal with Simpson Gumpertz & Heger (SGH), a nationwide consulting engineering firm, and has more than 25 years of experience in consulting and heavy construction throughout the United States. Sherman has specialized in concrete and construction materials throughout his entire career in consulting and construction. At SGH, he supports company-wide materials and construction-related projects. His work includes evaluating existing structures; assessing and evaluating concrete materials, corrosion, and alkali-silica reaction (ASR); evaluating and repairing specialized structures, such as stadia, ice rinks, and swimming pools; designing and evaluating bonded toppings and overlays; and evaluating and supporting construction operations. At SGH, he has led notable projects such as restoring the University of Notre Dame Stadium, designing overlay repairs, and investigating concrete performance issues. Prior to joining SGH, he was a Project Engineer at J.F. White, where he oversaw the underpinning of the existing elevated structure in Boston’s North End for Contract C15A1 during the “Big Dig.” Sherman is a Fellow of ACI and the International Concrete Repair Institute (ICRI). An ACI committee member since 2010, Sherman is Chair of the ACI Membership Committee and a member of the ACI Board of Direction, the Fellows Nomination Committee, and ACI Committees 201, Durability of Concrete; 228, Nondestructive Testing of Concrete; and 349, Concrete Nuclear Structures; as well as on the Executive Committee Task Group on Outlook 2040. He served as Chair of the Membership and Financial Activities Committee. Sherman is also active with ICRI, where he serves on multiple committees and as Chair of the Technical Activities Committee. Sherman received his BS in civil engineering from Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA, in 1991, and his MS in civil engineering (structural) from The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, in 1993. He is a licensed professional engineer in multiple states and two Canadian provinces. Directors Michael Ahern is a Principal with Pivot Engineers (Pivot) in Austin, TX. Pivot is a structural engineering firm that focuses on investigation, nondestructive testing, consulting, and repair and strengthening design on projects across the country for contractors, engineers, attorneys, owners, and other clients. Ahern began his career in structural engineering design, working on various projects including stadiums, hospitals, and government facilities. His responsibilities included both design and construction administration. During this time, he spent 16 months as the site structural engineer for the football stadium expansion at The University of Texas at Austin. This hands-on experience led Ahern to switch from design to forensics and focus on existing structures and structures under construction. Two repair projects he helped lead received International Concrete Repair Institute (ICRI) awards: Courthouse Square Complex in Salem, OR, USA, earned an Award of Excellence, and The Austonian in Austin, TX, received the Project of the Year Award and an Award of Excellence. The Austonian project also received an ACI Excellence Award. Ahern joined ACI in 2010. He is a member and past Chair of Joint ACI-ASCC Committee 117, Tolerances, and a member of ACI Subcommittee 318-A, General, Concrete, and Construction. He is also past Chair of the ACI Financial Advisory Committee. In addition to ACI, he served on the External Advisory Committee for the Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering Department at The University of Texas at Austin and as President, Vice President, and Secretary of the Structural Engineers Association of Texas (SEAoT) Austin Chapter. He received his BS in civil engineering with honors from the University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA, and his MS in structural engineering and MBA from The University of Texas at Austin. He is a licensed professional engineer in Texas and other states. Mary Beth Deisz Hueste, FACI, is the Truman R. Jones, Jr. ‘43 Professor in the Zachry Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Texas A&M University, College Station, TX. Hueste conducts research promoting resilient infrastructure, including the development of new design approaches and application of innovative materials to enhance service life, structural performance, and safety of the built environment. Her research includes earthquake-resistant design of concrete building structures, performance-based seismic design, design and evaluation of prestressed concrete bridge structures, and assessment of aging infrastructure. Hueste is a Fellow of ACI. She serves as a member of the ACI Structural Journal Editorial Board; as well as ACI Committees 318, Structural Concrete Building Code, and 374, Performance-Based Seismic Design of Concrete Buildings; and Joint ACI-ASCE Committee 352, Joints and Connections in Monolithic Concrete Structures. She has served on several other ACI committees, including the Technical Activities Committee and Education Activities Committee. She received the 2016 ACI Delmar L. Bloem Distinguished Service Award, the 2021 ACI Joe W. Kelly Award, and the 2022 ACI Houston Chapter Professor Achievement Award. Hueste is also a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute (EERI), the International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineers (IABSE), the Precast/Prestressed Concrete Institute (PCI), and Structural Engineers Association of Texas (SEAoT). Hueste is a licensed professional engineer in Kansas and Texas and worked as a structural engineer prior to completing her graduate studies. At Texas A&M University, she teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in structural engineering, focusing on structural concrete design for nonprestressed and prestressed systems, and a capstone design course dedicated to building design projects. Hueste received her BS from North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND, USA; her MS from the University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS; and her PhD from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, all in civil engineering. Xiomara Sapón-Roldán is Knowledge and Quality Manager at Instituto del Cemento y del Concreto de Guatemala in Guatemala. She joined the ACI Guatemala Chapter in 2008, served as Secretary between 2014 and 2022, and from 2022 has served as Vice President. She was actively involved in establishing the first ACI student chapter in Guatemala, and, after initiating this chapter in 2010 until present, she continues to serve as a liaison between the ACI Guatemala Chapter and 26 student chapters currently functioning in Guatemala. Sapón-Roldán joined the Guatemala ACI certification local sponsoring group in 2007 and in 2014 became its Head. She was involved with the local Voluntary Task Group in developing Spanish materials for three ACI Certification programs and their implementation in Guatemala: Concrete Strength Testing Technician; Aggregate Testing Technician—Level 1; and Concrete Construction Special Inspector. Since 2012, she has also served as Principal Examiner for Concrete Field Testing Technician—Grade I, Concrete Strength Testing Technician, Concrete Laboratory Testing Technician – Level 2, Aggregate Testing Technician—Level 1 and 2, and Aggregate Base Testing Technician certification programs. In 2015, she was approved as an Examiner for the Concrete Flatwork Finisher Technician certification program. She is Chair of ACI Subcommittee 13-1, International Certification, and is a member of the ACI International Advisory Committee and ACI Committees 130, Sustainability of Concrete, C602, International Standards Certification Programs Oversight Committee, and Educational Activities Committee. Her local and international involvement also includes ASTM International, National Guatemalan Standards Organization (COGUANOR), the Guatemala ALCONPAT (Latin American Association for the Quality Control, Pathology, and Rehabilitation of Buildings) Chapter, Building Commission for the Guatemalan National Council for Science and Technology, the Iberoamerican Ready Mixed Concrete Association (FIHP), and the Housing and Sustainability Committees of the Inter-American Cement Federation (FICEM). Sapón-Roldán received the 2021 ACI Certification Award and the 2016 ACI Chapter Activities Award. She received her civil engineering degree from San Carlos University, Guatemala, Guatemala, and her master’s in engineering and industrial management from Rafael Landívar University, Guatemala, Guatemala. She also completed studies in organizational strategy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA. Kimberly Waggle Kramer, FACI, is G.E. Johnson Construction Science Chair and Professor at Kansas State University in Manhattan, KS, where her teaching emphasis is structural design and concrete construction. Her experience encompasses technical, consulting, scientific, and academic involvement in various areas of structural engineering and construction. Prior to her academic career, her structural engineering career started in 1989 working for Leo A. Daly, and progressed at HTB, Carter-Burgess, and GideonToal as Director of Structural Engineering. On this journey, she worked on a variety of award-winning projects nationally and internationally. Additionally, Kramer was co-owner of Contractor’s Engineer, Inc., a custom formwork company. Kramer’s experience includes renovation, restoration, and structural design for commercial, institutional, industrial, federal, aviation, and recreational projects. Kramer serves as Chair of the ACI Educational Activities Committee and ACI Committee 551, Tilt-Up Concrete Construction. She is also Chair of the Kansas Board of Technical Professions, appointed by Governor Laura Kelly. She is past Chair of ACI Committees E702, Designing Concrete Structures, and 124, Concrete Aesthetics; and ACI Subcommittee 130-G, Education. Kramer has served ACI in various capacities over the years, including contributions to document development, organizing technical sessions, editing symposium publications, peer reviewing ACI publications, and presenting in technical sessions. She has judged for several ACI competitions and served on ACI education and publication award committees. She is an award-winning professor and faculty advisor. Kramer received the 2024 American Society of Civil Engineering Architectural Engineering Institute’s (ASCE AEI) Outstanding Educator Award, 2022 ACI Education Award, 2022 Kansas State University (KSU) Snell Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Award, 2021 ACI Sustainability Award, 2017 KSU Myers-Alford Memorial Teaching Award, and 2015 KSU Scholer Faculty Award. Additionally, as Faculty Advisor for numerous student competition teams, the teams have won multiple ASCE AEI International Student Design Competitions and several ACI Construction Competition Awards, plus the ACI Concrete Project Competition Award, ACI Pervious Concrete Competition Sustainability Report Award, and NSPE Milton F. Lunch Ethics Contest. Kramer received her BS in architectural engineering from KSU; her ME in civil engineering from The University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX; and her PhD in civil engineering from KSU. She is a licensed professional engineer and licensed structural engineer in 13 states. ### For more information, contact: American Concrete Institute p +1.248.848.3700 American Concrete Institute | Always advancing concrete.org Always advancing – The American Concrete Institute is a leading global authority for the development, dissemination, and adoption of its consensus-based standards, technical resources, and educational, training, & certification programs. Founded in 1904, ACI is headquartered in Farmington Hills, Michigan, USA, with a regional office in Dubai, UAE, and resource centers in Southern California, Chicago/Midwest, and the Mid-Atlantic. Visit concrete.org for additional information. ###
President, vice president, and board members elected
The American Concrete Institute (ACI) announces its 2025-2026 president, vice president, and four board members.
Maria Juenger has been elected to serve as president of the Institute for 2025-2026, and Matthew R. Sherman has been elected ACI vice president for a two-year term. Additionally, four members have been elected to serve on the ACI Board of Direction, each for three-year terms: Michael Ahern, Mary Beth Deisz Hueste, Xiomara Sapón-Roldán, and Kimberly Waggle Kramer.
President
Maria Juenger, FACI, is a Professor and the Ernest Cockrell, Jr. Centennial Chair in Engineering #2 in the Fariborz Maseeh Department of Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX,. Juenger’s teaching and research focus on materials used in civil engineering applications. She primarily examines chemical issues in cement-based materials, including phase formation in cement clinkering, hydration chemistry of cements and supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs), and chemical deterioration processes in concrete. Her current research efforts emphasize the interaction of cement-based materials and the environment. This work encompasses the development and characterization of cementitious systems with lower carbon dioxide and energy footprints, as well as the capacity of cementitious materials to produce or remove airborne and waterborne pollutants.
Juenger is a Fellow of ACI and the American Ceramic Society (ACerS). She is a member of numerous ACI committees and has received several awards from ACI for her research, teaching, and service, including the 2009 Walter P. Moore, Jr. Faculty Achievement Award, 2010 ACI Young Member Award for Professional Achievement, 2011 Wason Medal for Materials Research, 2018 Delmar L. Bloem Distinguished Service Award, and 2020 ACI Concrete Sustainability Award. She has also received a Faculty Early CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation and was the 2024 ACerS Cements Division Della Roy Lecturer. She is on the Editorial Boards of both Cement and Concrete Research and Cement and Concrete Composites.
Juenger received her BS in chemistry from Duke University, Durham, NC, USA, and her PhD in materials science and engineering from Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA. After completing her PhD, she was a Postdoctoral Researcher in civil engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA, before coming to The University of Texas at Austin.
Vice President
Matthew R. Sherman, FACI, is Senior Principal with Simpson Gumpertz & Heger (SGH), a nationwide consulting engineering firm, and has more than 25 years of experience in consulting and heavy construction throughout the United States.
Sherman has specialized in concrete and construction materials throughout his entire career in consulting and construction. At SGH, he supports company-wide materials and construction-related projects. His work includes evaluating existing structures; assessing and evaluating concrete materials, corrosion, and alkali-silica reaction (ASR); evaluating and repairing specialized structures, such as stadia, ice rinks, and swimming pools; designing and evaluating bonded toppings and overlays; and evaluating and supporting construction operations. At SGH, he has led notable projects such as restoring the University of Notre Dame Stadium, designing overlay repairs, and investigating concrete performance issues. Prior to joining SGH, he was a Project Engineer at J.F. White, where he oversaw the underpinning of the existing elevated structure in Boston’s North End for Contract C15A1 during the “Big Dig.”
Sherman is a Fellow of ACI and the International Concrete Repair Institute (ICRI). An ACI committee member since 2010, Sherman is Chair of the ACI Membership Committee and a member of the ACI Board of Direction, the Fellows Nomination Committee, and ACI Committees 201, Durability of Concrete; 228, Nondestructive Testing of Concrete; and 349, Concrete Nuclear Structures; as well as on the Executive Committee Task Group on Outlook 2040. He served as Chair of the Membership and Financial Activities Committee. Sherman is also active with ICRI, where he serves on multiple committees and as Chair of the Technical Activities Committee.
Sherman received his BS in civil engineering from Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA, in 1991, and his MS in civil engineering (structural) from The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, in 1993. He is a licensed professional engineer in multiple states and two Canadian provinces.
Directors
Michael Ahern is a Principal with Pivot Engineers (Pivot) in Austin, TX. Pivot is a structural engineering firm that focuses on investigation, nondestructive testing, consulting, and repair and strengthening design on projects across the country for contractors, engineers, attorneys, owners, and other clients.
Ahern began his career in structural engineering design, working on various projects including stadiums, hospitals, and government facilities. His responsibilities included both design and construction administration. During this time, he spent 16 months as the site structural engineer for the football stadium expansion at The University of Texas at Austin. This hands-on experience led Ahern to switch from design to forensics and focus on existing structures and structures under construction. Two repair projects he helped lead received International Concrete Repair Institute (ICRI) awards: Courthouse Square Complex in Salem, OR, USA, earned an Award of Excellence, and The Austonian in Austin, TX, received the Project of the Year Award and an Award of Excellence. The Austonian project also received an ACI Excellence Award.
Ahern joined ACI in 2010. He is a member and past Chair of Joint ACI-ASCC Committee 117, Tolerances, and a member of ACI Subcommittee 318-A, General, Concrete, and Construction. He is also past Chair of the ACI Financial Advisory Committee. In addition to ACI, he served on the External Advisory Committee for the Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering Department at The University of Texas at Austin and as President, Vice President, and Secretary of the Structural Engineers Association of Texas (SEAoT) Austin Chapter.
He received his BS in civil engineering with honors from the University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA, and his MS in structural engineering and MBA from The University of Texas at Austin. He is a licensed professional engineer in Texas and other states.
Mary Beth Deisz Hueste, FACI, is the Truman R. Jones, Jr. ‘43 Professor in the Zachry Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Texas A&M University, College Station, TX.
Hueste conducts research promoting resilient infrastructure, including the development of new design approaches and application of innovative materials to enhance service life, structural performance, and safety of the built environment. Her research includes earthquake-resistant design of concrete building structures, performance-based seismic design, design and evaluation of prestressed concrete bridge structures, and assessment of aging infrastructure.
Hueste is a Fellow of ACI. She serves as a member of the ACI Structural Journal Editorial Board; as well as ACI Committees 318, Structural Concrete Building Code, and 374, Performance-Based Seismic Design of Concrete Buildings; and Joint ACI-ASCE Committee 352, Joints and Connections in Monolithic Concrete Structures. She has served on several other ACI committees, including the Technical Activities Committee and Education Activities Committee. She received the 2016 ACI Delmar L. Bloem Distinguished Service Award, the 2021 ACI Joe W. Kelly Award, and the 2022 ACI Houston Chapter Professor Achievement Award.
Hueste is also a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute (EERI), the International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineers (IABSE), the Precast/Prestressed Concrete Institute (PCI), and Structural Engineers Association of Texas (SEAoT).
Hueste is a licensed professional engineer in Kansas and Texas and worked as a structural engineer prior to completing her graduate studies. At Texas A&M University, she teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in structural engineering, focusing on structural concrete design for nonprestressed and prestressed systems, and a capstone design course dedicated to building design projects.
Hueste received her BS from North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND, USA; her MS from the University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS; and her PhD from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, all in civil engineering.
Xiomara Sapón-Roldán is Knowledge and Quality Manager at Instituto del Cemento y del Concreto de Guatemala in Guatemala. She joined the ACI Guatemala Chapter in 2008, served as Secretary between 2014 and 2022, and from 2022 has served as Vice President. She was actively involved in establishing the first ACI student chapter in Guatemala, and, after initiating this chapter in 2010 until present, she continues to serve as a liaison between the ACI Guatemala Chapter and 26 student chapters currently functioning in Guatemala.
Sapón-Roldán joined the Guatemala ACI certification local sponsoring group in 2007 and in 2014 became its Head. She was involved with the local Voluntary Task Group in developing Spanish materials for three ACI Certification programs and their implementation in Guatemala: Concrete Strength Testing Technician; Aggregate Testing Technician—Level 1; and Concrete Construction Special Inspector. Since 2012, she has also served as Principal Examiner for Concrete Field Testing Technician—Grade I, Concrete Strength Testing Technician, Concrete Laboratory Testing Technician – Level 2, Aggregate Testing Technician—Level 1 and 2, and Aggregate Base Testing Technician certification programs. In 2015, she was approved as an Examiner for the Concrete Flatwork Finisher Technician certification program.
She is Chair of ACI Subcommittee 13-1, International Certification, and is a member of the ACI International Advisory Committee and ACI Committees 130, Sustainability of Concrete, C602, International Standards Certification Programs Oversight Committee, and Educational Activities Committee.
Her local and international involvement also includes ASTM International, National Guatemalan Standards Organization (COGUANOR), the Guatemala ALCONPAT (Latin American Association for the Quality Control, Pathology, and Rehabilitation of Buildings) Chapter, Building Commission for the Guatemalan National Council for Science and Technology, the Iberoamerican Ready Mixed Concrete Association (FIHP), and the Housing and Sustainability Committees of the Inter-American Cement Federation (FICEM).
Sapón-Roldán received the 2021 ACI Certification Award and the 2016 ACI Chapter Activities Award. She received her civil engineering degree from San Carlos University, Guatemala, Guatemala, and her master’s in engineering and industrial management from Rafael Landívar University, Guatemala, Guatemala. She also completed studies in organizational strategy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA.
Kimberly Waggle Kramer, FACI, is G.E. Johnson Construction Science Chair and Professor at Kansas State University in Manhattan, KS, where her teaching emphasis is structural design and concrete construction. Her experience encompasses technical, consulting, scientific, and academic involvement in various areas of structural engineering and construction.
Prior to her academic career, her structural engineering career started in 1989 working for Leo A. Daly, and progressed at HTB, Carter-Burgess, and GideonToal as Director of Structural Engineering. On this journey, she worked on a variety of award-winning projects nationally and internationally. Additionally, Kramer was co-owner of Contractor’s Engineer, Inc., a custom formwork company. Kramer’s experience includes renovation, restoration, and structural design for commercial, institutional, industrial, federal, aviation, and recreational projects.
Kramer serves as Chair of the ACI Educational Activities Committee and ACI Committee 551, Tilt-Up Concrete Construction. She is also Chair of the Kansas Board of Technical Professions, appointed by Governor Laura Kelly. She is past Chair of ACI Committees E702, Designing Concrete Structures, and 124, Concrete Aesthetics; and ACI Subcommittee 130-G, Education. Kramer has served ACI in various capacities over the years, including contributions to document development, organizing technical sessions, editing symposium publications, peer reviewing ACI publications, and presenting in technical sessions. She has judged for several ACI competitions and served on ACI education and publication award committees.
She is an award-winning professor and faculty advisor. Kramer received the 2024 American Society of Civil Engineering Architectural Engineering Institute’s (ASCE AEI) Outstanding Educator Award, 2022 ACI Education Award, 2022 Kansas State University (KSU) Snell Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Award, 2021 ACI Sustainability Award, 2017 KSU Myers-Alford Memorial Teaching Award, and 2015 KSU Scholer Faculty Award. Additionally, as Faculty Advisor for numerous student competition teams, the teams have won multiple ASCE AEI International Student Design Competitions and several ACI Construction Competition Awards, plus the ACI Concrete Project Competition Award, ACI Pervious Concrete Competition Sustainability Report Award, and NSPE Milton F. Lunch Ethics Contest.
Kramer received her BS in architectural engineering from KSU; her ME in civil engineering from The University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX; and her PhD in civil engineering from KSU. She is a licensed professional engineer and licensed structural engineer in 13 states.
###
For more information, contact:
American Concrete Institute p +1.248.848.3700 American Concrete Institute | Always advancing concrete.org
Always advancing – The American Concrete Institute is a leading global authority for the development, dissemination, and adoption of its consensus-based standards, technical resources, and educational, training, & certification programs. Founded in 1904, ACI is headquartered in Farmington Hills, Michigan, USA, with a regional office in Dubai, UAE, and resource centers in Southern California, Chicago/Midwest, and the Mid-Atlantic. Visit concrete.org for additional information.
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