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Baltimore Sun
Baltimore Sun’s 2023 Business and Civic Hall of Fame honoree: Timothy J. ‘Tim’ Regan
Baltimore Sun · Lloyd Fox/Baltimore Sun/TNS

The first time that Timothy J. “Tim” Regan applied for a job at Whiting-Turner Contracting Company, he was rejected.

Regan, who had recently graduated from the University of Maryland, College Park with a degree in civil engineering, took a job with the State Highway Administration instead. The more he worked on construction projects for the SHA, the more he realized he wanted to be a contractor.

Fortunately, another opportunity at Whiting-Turner came around, and in 1980 he got the job. Forty-three years later, Regan is the company’s CEO, and has been for nearly a decade.

Landing the top role came as something of a surprise to a “Baltimore City kid” who grew up in the neighborhood of Gardenville, in the city’s northeast. Regan’s father was a truck driver with an alcohol addiction, and his family went through rough patches when he was a child, at times relying on food stamps. The image of his mother laying down food stamps on a grocery belt is one, he said, “that you don’t forget.”

A junior high school counselor who saw Regan’s potential recommended he attend the Baltimore Polytechnic Institute, and it was there that he developed “a kind of a toughness and a discipline that was life-changing.”

That discipline was put to good use as Regan, now 68, worked his way up at Whiting-Turner. He started as a project engineer, and quickly found that he enjoyed taking on small solo jobs, where he could work with clients and solve problems.

In the early 1990s, he began to specialize in projects for the life sciences industry, which was rapidly growing in Maryland along the Interstate 270 corridor in particular. During the next two decades, Regan was instrumental in helping to expand Whiting-Turner’s presence in the field. “It exploded, it became a big thing for us, and still is today,” he says. In 2021, Whiting-Turner topped the list of the nation’s largest science and technology facility contractors, bringing in $933.5 million in revenue from projects in the sector, according to a ranking released last year by Building Design + Construction, a trade publication.

By 2006, Regan had been promoted to a vice president role at the contracting company. Then, sometime later, former CEO Willard Hackerman invited Regan to come to his office for a talk.

“He sat me down, he closed the door, and he pulled his chair very close to mine,” Regan says. “And with no preamble whatsoever, he said to me: ‘I want you to be the next president of Whiting-Turner.’”

Regan was floored. “The whole world went fuzzy and gray. I thought I was going to pass out,” he recalls. “The concept had never crossed my mind.”