Builders across the country have been unsettled for the past few years by the labor crisis, which once seemed only a distant and looming threat to business. But now, the scarcity of skilled workers is what industry professionals say is the top worry keeping them up at night.
One Colorado builder facing the labor issue along with the rest of the industry knew that much of the untapped potential for reviving the workforce could be found in the countryâs young people, and he set out to find them. Pat Hamill, chairman and CEO of Denver-based Oakwood Homes, last year created the Colorado Homebuilding Academy, a learning lab of sorts that seeks to educate studentsâfrom high schoolers to adults looking for a job changeâabout a career in home building and provide them with hands-on construction experience. The academy expects to have more than 500 students complete programs in 2018.
âWeâve been talking about the decline of the workforce for at least five years now, and when we realized the problem not only wasnât going to go away, but actually get worse, we decided to do something about it,â Hamill says.

Courtesy Colorado Homebuilding Academy
Hamill and his team at the academy work to give students hands-on experience in construction
As a leader who has spent his career instilling the importance of charitable giving and volunteering into his 27-year-old companyâs DNA, Hamill is the recipient of the 2018 Hearthstone BUILDER Humanitarian Award, which heâll receive in May at the Housing Leadership Summit in California. The awardâpresented annually by BUILDER and Hearthstone, an investor in residential developmentâhas given nearly $6 million to charity in its 19 years. It honors builders who have shown a lifetime commitment to making their communities a better place to work and live.
Amy Schwartz, executive director of BuildStrong Education, a private foundation of Oakwood Homes that funds the Colorado Homebuilding Academy among other education campaigns, found local nonprofits organizations that were already working to combat the labor shortage through construction training and created partnerships that helped bring the academy to life.
âThe academy is housed in 20,000 square feet of space in one of Precision Building Systemsâ truss and wall panel factories, where there is half of an Oakwood home installed in the lab space,â Schwartz says. âIt has different stations where students can practice installing drywall, siding, or roof tiles, for example, and the stations have some mistakes engineered in for practice, too.â
The academy also helps with job placement for its students, hoping to get as many young graduates interested in the trades as possible. Hamill says the industry as a whole hasnât done a great job âof marketing construction careers, so we partner with schools in the area to create awareness among young people about how they can be successful with a job in home building and all the opportunities available to them in the industry.â
Education initiatives
Hamill knows education starts well before someone begins thinking about a career path, which is why Oakwood focuses heavily on funding programs that set up youth for success.
âTodayâs kids are tomorrowâs future leaders,â Hamill says. âOur view is that learning is an issue of fundamental right, and it doesnât matter what race you are, or if you are poor or wealthyâeducation is the one element that can help a child go wherever they want to go.â
Hamill founded BuildStrong Education (formerly the Foundation for Educational Excellence) in 1997. At the time, the parcel of land on which Oakwood would build its largest master-planned community, Green Valley Ranch, was home to the neighborhoodâs failing middle school. Over a number of years, BuildStrong Education worked with other community partners to raise funds to transform the public school, which now serves students through 12th grade. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Early College, which has 1,116 students, has seen a 100% graduation rate for the past four years and offers students the ability to take concurrent college classes and graduate with an associateâs degree at no cost.

Courtesy BuildStrong Education
Pat Hamill, Amy Schwartz (second from left), and other team members celebrate the launch of BuildStrong Education.
âWe build master planned communities, and schools are one of the first things a family looks at when searching for a home, so we really take the entire experience seriously,â says Schwartz. âSome developers are happy just to have a school building nearby, but we believe itâs whatâs inside that building that counts most. We have really seen a transformation in the Green Valley Ranchâarea schools over the years.â
Oakwood Homes donates $1,000 per closing to the foundation. The company even continued to contribute during the downturn, though at a lower rate per closing. In total, the foundation has invested more than $5 million in funding for academic programs, construction costs for school infrastructure, and student and family support programs in and around Oakwood communities over the past 20 years.
The foundation also helped create Z Place, an early childhood education campus and service provider for more than 3,000 students and families. The building sits on a complex with multiple schools and provides support services, such as a doctorâs office, mental health services, after-school care, and academic help to the students on-site.
Believing that what children learn outside of school is just as important as what they learn in it, Hamill has previously served on the board of the Boys & Girls Club of Metro Denver, and has led the organization in fundraising efforts. Similar to Z Place, the Boys & Girls Club also provides a place for its 10,000 students across 15 locations to go after school for academic help and recreational activities, at almost no cost to its members.

ALSAC/St. Jude/Tara Moyer
Oakwood Homes has teamed up with St. Jude Childrenâs Research Hospital eight times to build a St. Jude Dream Home. The 2017 home raised $1.35 million in raffle ticket entries. See Dream Home sidebar.
Dream House
As one of the top 100 home builders in the country, itâs a no-brainer that Oakwood Homes gives back to the community by building a house.
The company, along with sponsors such as Brizo, Trane, Shaw Floors, and Bosch, among other manufacturers, has teamed up with St. Jude Childrenâs Research Hospital eight times to build a St. Jude Dream Home in one of its communities, which Oakwood then donates to the hospital at no cost. The 3,400-square-foot home built last year (above) was valued at $750,000 and featured four bedrooms and two-and-a-half baths.
âItâs the easiest thing we do,â Hamill says. âWe are able to bring our entire home building community together, including our vendors, manufacturers, and trade contractors, and partner with other organizations in the community to build this house free and clear for the hospital.â
St. Judeâsâa leading childrenâs hospital for children with cancer and other life-threatening diseasesâsells tickets for about $100 each to raffle off the home to participants in the community. More than 10,000 Colorado residents participated in last yearâs raffle. So far, Oakwood has raised over $7.5 million dollars for the hospital through the raffle, bringing in $1.35 million from the 2017 ticket sales alone.
âItâs great that St. Judeâs is open to any child that needs help, and the children that receive care donât have to pay any costs,â Hamill says. âOur goal is to pay for a whole day of the hospital running.â
âWe serve youth at probably the most important time of the day, which is after school,â says Hamill. âWe create a safe space for them in some tough neighborhoods, and also serve dinners to the students every day, which is important for a lot of our families.â
Hamill has led numerous fundraisers to raise money for the organization, including building and donating a house through Home for Good and establishing a five-year, $1.25 million partnership with the Denver Broncos NFL team.
Kathy Luna, chief operating officer of Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Denver, says Hamillâs commitment played a large role in keeping the organization going during the recession, as he continued to donate and raise money even in tough financial times. She touts Hamill as âone of our most successful volunteer fundraisers in the organizationâs 56-year history.â
One such important fundraiser benefiting the Boys & Girls Club is a yearly golf tournament led by Hamill, who founded the Colorado Open Golf Foundation and a First Tee chapter in Denver. The First Tee, a national organization, is a youth development program that teaches life skills to students through the game of golf. Over the past 13 years since the program started in the Denver area, it has grown from serving 53 children to over 5,000.
âMany of these kids are from the inner city and wouldnât otherwise have the opportunity to learn to play golf,â says Hamill. âMore importantly, they are learning important life skills, have mentors and role models, and even scholarship opportunities to attend college.â
Denverâs First Tee chapter is led by Colorado Open Golf Foundation CEO Kevin Laura, who says the skills children learn through the sports program go beyond just academics. âWe will hear from teachers and parents who say theyâve seen an increase in the level of respect, attention, and integrity a child shows,â he says, adding that itâs an âinfectious programâ that likely wouldnât have been possible without Hamill.
Hamill got involved at a time when long-running fundraising events were being canceled just before the recession. He created the Jack A. Vickers Invitational and other golf tournaments to keep efforts going, the proceeds of which fund the First Tee and Boys & Girls Club of Metro Denver. In the past 10 years, Laura says the events have raised more than $6 million, which has gone toward program funding and the building of new facilities for the two organizations.
âPat came in and saved these 50-year-old golf tournaments that had been raising money for charity for years,â says Laura. âItâs really only because of his drive and leadership that any of this happened.â
True Dedication
Those who know Hamill testify to his quiet generosity, humble nature, and full commitment to both his causes and the community where he builds homes.
âHe doesnât go half in, but all in, and is really engaged in every project he is involved with,â Luna says.
Laura seconds that, describing Hamill as someone who âdoesnât do these things to be self-promoting or promoting of his business. He is truly committed with every cell in his blood and dollar in his pocket. He knows that better students create better adults, and therefore better communities, and he wants the people in the communities where he builds to be successful.â
Giving is part of who Hamill is, and itâs become part of what Oakwood Homes is as a company. Mark Porath, CEO of Hearthstone, notes that he is âalways humbled by the self-sacrifice of the leaders in our industry, which inevitably makes it a difficult decision to just select one award recipient. This year, we will all learn from Pat Hamillâs selflessness and leadership, and be inspired by it.â
Thereâs no slowing down for the builder, who says he plans to stay âhumble and hungryâ going forward.
âMy dad taught me very early on that just because you are born into a certain position in society doesnât mean you are owed a thing,â Hamill says. âIn fact, itâs quite the oppositeâyou owe a tremendous debt to the people who have come before you and created a better place. So I always ask, âHow can you create an opportunity or environment for others to be successful?ââ