CHICAGO, Ill. — Cotter Consulting has added Amy Huber, IIDA, NCIDQ, to its rapidly growing healthcare group. She has more than 15 years of program management, facilities management and interior design experience in the healthcare industry. She is a registered interior designer.
Prior to joining Cotter, Huber served as a project manager, planner and interior designer for Integrated Facilities Solutions for nine years. Huber was also an interior designer with Eckenhoff Saunders Architects from 1999 to 2004.
The decision to come work with Cotter was easy: there is opportunity for growth, with clear and defined support from the top down. I’m becoming part of a specialized team and am able to bring my various skills to add value to a growing team,” Huber says. “I’m looking forward to learning new business principles and wearing many different hats. It’s really exciting to have this opportunity.”
Huber has managed the planning and design of healthcare projects ranging from $350,000 to over $41 million, including nearly 200,000 square feet of new construction and renovation for NorthShore University Health System and more than 110,000 square feet for Ingalls Calumet City and Flossmoor medical office buildings and family care centers. Her passionate dedication for healthcare and project management will further complement Cotter’s ongoing mission to make every client a “raving fan.”
“Amy epitomizes Cotter’s approach to client advocacy,” says Anne Edwards-Cotter, owner and president of Cotter Consulting. “She has great experience in project management of healthcare projects — especially in the design phase — as well as technical knowledge and the ability to work with all stakeholders within client organizations to deliver successful programs and projects.”
Huber holds a BFA in interior design from a FIDER-accredited program at the International Academy of Design & Technology (formerly the International Academy of Merchandising and Design). She is NCIDQ certified, ASHE Healthcare Construction certified and a member of the American Society for Healthcare Engineering, the International Interior Design Association and the American College of Healthcare Executives.