September 12, 2024

Cash named one of Greenville's Best and Brightest

Colby Cash

Greenville Business Journal recently named Garver’s Process Mechanical Team Leader Colby Cash, PE, to its Best and Brightest 35 & Under list, which honors young, local leaders for their professional efforts and services to the community.

Collaborating with municipalities on a local and national level, Cash is honored to provide clean, reliable water solutions for South Carolina through water and wastewater infrastructure.

Leading a team of local environmental engineers, Cash’s work spans several areas, from technical facility design, to project, process, and people management. In addition, he develops innovative design tools and instructional guides for his team to best serve their clients.

Cash serves as a trusted advisor in design and construction, diagnosing and troubleshooting various issues water utilities are facing, while also highlighting current water technologies and assisting clients in finding the best solutions for them.

In the Cash family, engineering roots run deep. Following in his grandfather’s footsteps of being a Professional Engineer, Cash carries the torch as he continues work on infrastructure projects his grandfather designed in Greenville in the 1970s and 1980s.

Cash recognizes the importance of inspiring future generations of engineers and remains adamant in his mentorship efforts to encourage the engineering professionals that will succeed him.

Additionally, Cash has quite the list of community service endeavors, from volunteering for Downtown Presbyterian Church to participating in cleanups with Friends of the Reedy River. During his college years, he spent several months in Haiti building water infrastructure and learning how clean water access improves the health and wellness of communities.

Cash’s impressive expertise landed him a spot at our Greenville Water Design Center, serving as Garver’s first external hire. At only 33 years old, he continues to impact Greenville residents through his commitment to enhancing local water systems and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future.

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