The Water Collaborative Delivery Association recently announced its upcoming 20th Anniversary Symposium, a three-day gathering designed to bring water utilities, practitioners and industry partners from around the nation together for high-value learning and connection. The symposium marks two decades of WCDA’s work advancing collaborative approaches that help utilities deliver projects more efficiently, manage risk and strengthen long-term system resilience.
The event will take place July 27-29 in Denver, Colorado, and will feature a mix of education sessions, facilitated discussions, a project site tour, golf tournament and additional opportunities for utilities to engage with peers facing similar challenges and opportunities across the municipal sector.
“As we mark 20 years of the WCDA, this symposium is an opportunity to bring collaborative delivery stakeholders together around shared learning and connection,” says Guy Voss, WCDA president. “This event will introduce general managers, finance experts, consulting engineers, and many other municipal professionals to emerging trends, real-world examples, strategies and innovations from those doing collaborative delivery best in our industry.”
Education program focused on utility needs
Collaborative delivery is the fastest growing form of project delivery in the water sector, seeing a 10% annual growth rate and $30 billion invested in the past decade. With regulatory and reliability pressures higher than ever, collaborative delivery helps water-infrastructure owners identify constructability, cost and operational risks early and execute upgrades with confidence. This approach allows for fewer funding unknowns, faster project delivery and transparency around the process, from design to construction.
A milestone moment
“This symposium reflects WCDA at its best,” says Barb Martin, WCDA executive director. “With two days of high-quality educational programming and a 20th anniversary celebration, this event honors our history while investing in the future of collaborative delivery in the water sector.”
The symposium is tailored for water utility professionals seeking practical insights, peer-to-peer learning and a deeper understanding of how collaborative delivery can support their capital programs. Attendees will have opportunities to:
• Engage directly with other utilities that are navigating similar challenges;
• Participate in interactive discussions with practitioners and subject-matter experts;
• Explore tools and approaches that support more predictable, resilient project outcomes; and
• Build relationships that strengthen collaboration across the water community.
The full symposium agenda will be released this month at watercollaborativedelivery.org.















