Blazing Design-Build Trails
Mike Stapf is helping to usher in a new era of design-build in the Midwest.
While growing up on his family farm in Millstadt, Illinois, Mike Stapf learned the importance of teamwork, diligence and thinking on his feet.
As it turns out, these are the same foundational skills that drive successful design-build construction projects.
Since stepping into his current role as vice president, design integration in 2014, Stapf has helped guide a series of large-scale design-build projects in McCarthy’s Central Region.
After a Mercy fundraiser, Mike stopped by the future site to grab a photo.
Unlike the traditional method of completing projects through individual contracts with an architect and a builder, design-build combines design and construction services as a single entity. The goal is to harness the expertise of all team members to maximize efficiency, reduce waste and optimize outcomes through all phases of a project.
Origin Story: From Fields to Foundations
As a young boy, he remembers helping his dad build pole barns—and eventually the family home—on their property. “When you live on a farm, you learn to do everything yourself, so we were all involved in that project,” he says.
Mike baling and stacking hay on his family farm.
While he enjoyed farm work, Stapf didn’t aspire to become a full-time farmer. Instead, he enrolled in the engineering program at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE).
Early into his college experience, however, Stapf ran into a stumbling block: Calculus II. “I really liked numbers and math, but I sucked at calculus,” he admits. “So my advisor asked if I’d be interested in the construction management program. I didn't even know that program existed, but it turned out to be a nice fit for me.”
His first hands-on commercial construction experience came as an intern at Korte & Luitjohan Contractors, a family-owned general contractor in Highland, Illinois. “It was a great experience, but I wanted to try working for a larger company without losing that family feel,” he recalls.
As fate would have it, Stapf noticed a flyer posted outside one of his classrooms advertising an estimating internship at McCarthy. “I jumped at the opportunity, came in for an interview and got hired,” he says.
That internship led to a full-time gig that turned into a 23+-year career.
One of his initial job assignments involved estimating the enclosure of a high-containment laboratory building for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta. “I had never been on an airplane before, and I remember flying down to Atlanta to meet with the CDC,” he says. “I felt like the whole world was opened up to me.”
Children's Hospital Colorado
Stapf earned a promotion to preconstruction director while working on the construction of a new 10-story tower at Children's Hospital Colorado.
And he developed expertise in disaster recovery preconstruction through his leadership on the construction of Mercy Hospital Joplin after an EF-5 tornado demolished the previous facility in 2011. He also played a pivotal role in the Southeast Louisiana Veterans Health Care System's new medical center in New Orleans, which replaced critical medical infrastructure damaged by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
Southeast Louisiana Veterans Health Care System's medical center in New Orleans
Since ascending to his current position as vice president, design integration in 2014, Stapf has bolstered McCarthy’s in-house capabilities by launching the Virtual Design & Construction (VDC) and Design Integration groups.
He currently serves on McCarthy’s Design Phase Leadership group, a national team that works together to advance the company’s expertise during the earliest parts of construction projects.
Get to Know Mike Stapf
Mike and his wife, Hillary, celebrated their 20th anniversary in 2023.
Daughters Tatum (17) and Taylor (14) are students at Notre Dame High School in St. Louis.
Mike and his family live about a half-mile from the farm where he grew up, and he still actively works on the farm in his spare time.
On Thursday nights, he participates in a trap shooting league at the Edwardsville Gun Club. He has shot 6,026 out of 7,300 clay pigeons over 12 years.
He also plays hockey with some of his McCarthy friends on Sundays.