Why Vickie DeHart’s Experience Matters in Cities Like London
London is a city constantly rebuilding itself. Old spaces become new housing. Retail districts evolve. Infrastructure expands. Behind every project is the same challenge: coordinating people, ideas, and execution under pressure.
That is why the career of Vickie DeHart, a construction and real estate leader based in Las Vegas, has lessons that resonate far beyond the United States. Cities like London rely on professionals who can move projects from concept to completion while managing complexity.
DeHart has spent decades doing exactly that. Her work has focused on aligning finance, planning, and on-site execution. Those are the same pressures developers and builders face in London today. “Big ideas only work if they’re grounded in execution,” she says. “You can have a great plan, but it only matters if it actually gets built.”
Her perspective is practical. Construction is not theoretical. It is about making decisions that affect people, timelines, and communities.
“There’s no hiding in construction,” DeHart explains. “Either it works or it doesn’t.”
Early Life and the Foundations of Responsibility
Vickie DeHart grew up in Jacksonville, Florida, alongside her two brothers. Her family environment was simple and disciplined. Responsibility was expected, not negotiated.
“If something needed to be done, you stepped in and did it,” she says.
That mindset carried into adulthood. After graduating from Western High School in Las Vegas in 1979, DeHart entered the workforce and gradually found herself drawn to construction and development.
What attracted her was the clarity of the industry. Progress is visible. Problems cannot be ignored.
“I liked that you could see the results of your work,” she explains. “A building either stands the way it should or it doesn’t.”
Becoming One of Nevada’s Early Female General Contractors
One of the defining chapters of DeHart’s career began at Powerhouse Construction, where she served as Principal and Vice President for five years.
The company specialised in framing apartments and condominiums, as well as renovations and tenant improvements for commercial retail spaces.
During this time, DeHart carried the company’s general contractor’s licence. That distinction made her one of the first women in Nevada to hold such responsibility.
She rarely presents this as a personal milestone.
“I didn’t think about being first,” she says. “I thought about the responsibility. When you carry the licence, the outcome sits with you.”
That mindset shaped her leadership approach. Accountability mattered more than recognition.
Lessons from the Job Site
Construction projects are rarely smooth. Delays, miscommunication, and shifting priorities are common.
One early Powerhouse project illustrated this clearly. A project began slipping behind schedule because suppliers and site teams were not aligned.
Instead of assigning blame, DeHart focused on the system.
“We added daily check-ins,” she recalls. “Even for smaller jobs. It was simple, but it fixed the communication gap.”
The experience reinforced a principle she still believes today.
“Most problems aren’t caused by lack of effort,” she says. “They come from unclear expectations.”
Building EHB: Integrating Planning and Execution
Later in her career, DeHart co-founded EHB alongside Yohan Lowie and her husband, Paul DeHart.
The idea behind the company was straightforward: reduce fragmentation in development projects.
Too often, planning, finance, and construction operate separately. EHB aimed to connect those functions more closely.
“At EHB we wanted fewer hand-offs,” she explains. “When everyone understands the same goal, projects move faster.”
Her role covers a wide range of responsibilities. She works closely with the CEO on strategy and operations. Her daily work includes financial oversight, insurance, escrow coordination, and collaboration with engineers, architects, and local building departments.
She also manages leasing and rental properties and works directly with clients during interior selections and home closings.
“One moment I’m reviewing financial details,” she says. “The next I’m walking through a property with a client. That balance keeps decisions realistic.”
Leadership Through Clarity and Presence
DeHart’s leadership style is calm and practical. She does not rely on pressure or hierarchy.
“I don’t believe in pressure-led leadership,” she says. “I believe in clarity.”
That philosophy influences how she works with teams. Rather than issuing constant instructions, she focuses on clear expectations and follow-through.
She also believes strongly in being physically present.
“You learn more by walking a site than reading ten reports,” she says. “Problems look different when you see them up close.”
In industries like construction, where decisions affect large budgets and tight schedules, that presence matters.
Wellness, Focus, and Long-Term Perspective
Outside work, DeHart prioritises wellness and time outdoors. Hiking and walking are regular parts of her routine.
The habit began as a personal choice but became an important leadership tool.
“When I step outside, my thinking becomes clearer,” she says. “Solutions often show up when you stop staring at the problem.”
Construction and development bring constant pressure. Physical activity helps her maintain perspective.
“If you don’t take care of your health,” she adds, “decision-making eventually suffers.”
A Career Built on Practical Ideas
Looking back, DeHart does not measure success through titles or recognition. Instead, she focuses on execution.
Projects delivered on time. Teams that communicate clearly. Processes that work better than before.
Her view of leadership remains simple.
“Buildings last,” she says. “But so do reputations.”
For cities like London — where development shapes neighbourhoods and communities — that principle carries weight. The best ideas are not the loudest ones.
They are the ones that get built.
Read more:
Vickie DeHart: Building Clarity and Leadership in Construction