About this role:
- As a Project Manager/Analyst in the Technology Innovation Department, you will be the bridge between in-house technology staff, key internal departments that have a stake in the modernization of rider-facing infrastructure, and our design consultant. Successfully delivering this critical phase of the modernization program within a complex government agency like the MBTA will require a wide range of skills. One day you might be wearing a safety vest, studying a complex station’s layout and sketching proposals; the next you might be facilitating working group discussions and sharing updates with senior executives.
This job requires:
- Attention to detail: A modernization program at 100 stations is akin to 100 different projects, each with their own challenges, constraints, and complexities. You’ll need to be relentlessly organized and on top of station-specific details.
- Communication skills: TID is a cross-functional team within a large, complex public agency. Succeeding in this role will mean being able to speak the languages of construction, architecture, accessibility, safety, transit operations, IT, and user experience—maybe allin the same day. It will require writing with clarityon a daily basis—and finding creative ways to communicate ideas with different audiences.
Principal duties and responsibilities:
- Be TID’s subject matter expert for stations
- Join the consultant on site visits, becoming intimately familiar with each station
- Review consultant plans and provide critical assessments of the consultant’s proposed locations for digital screens, speakers, wiring paths, and more
- Interface with internal MBTA departments to ensure that all requirements are considered in the consultant’s work—electrical, signals/communication, safety, accessibility, and more
- Manage the consultant’s work
- Coordinate weekly meetings, ensuring that records are kept and key decisions are logged
- Lead knowledge management of what will likely be a document-heavy project, with plansets, transmittals, and changelogs for each station
- Identify risks to the project’s scope and timeline, advocating for the prioritization of critical path work
- Stakeholder engagement & coordination
- Build and maintain relationships with key MBTA departments that make up the project’s working group
- Coordinate periodic meetingsand provide regular updates, ensuring alignment and transparency
- Understand and collate stakeholders’ needs, representing them to the consultant on a continuous basis
Work experience guidelines (minimum education)
- Formal education in project management, urban planning, architecture, engineering, construction or a related field (this could be a college degree, a bootcamp, a certificate program, or something else entirely).
What We Do
The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, often referred to as the MBTA or simply The T, is the public operator of most bus, subway, commuter rail and ferry systems in the greater Boston, Massachusetts, area. The MBTA is the largest transit provider in New England, and the fifth largest in the country. The MBTA directly operates or contracts out for service using eight different modes: heavy rail, light rail, bus rapid transit, local/express bus, trackless trolley, commuter rail, commuter boat, and paratransit. In Boston, 55% of all work trips and 42% of all trips into downtown are made by transit. The MBTA district is made up of 175 communities with a total population of 4.7 million. Almost three-quarters of all Massachusetts residents live within the MBTA service area.








