When Frank Wall steps into a room, he carries more than four decades of industry experience. He brings the confidence of someone who’s spent a lifetime building bridges between people who don’t always see eye to eye.
On Jan. 20, that steady hand officially took the helm of the Sheet Metal and Air Conditioning Contractors’ National Association (SMACNA), marking a new chapter.
For an association whose members sit at the intersection of technology, skill and labor, Wall’s appointment is a continuation of progress. “We’re pleased to be led by a professional with the leadership and industry skills necessary to navigate the challenges ahead,” explains Todd Hill, SMACNA President. “He is the right person to take the helm in achieving our objectives.”
Born and raised in Northeast Portland, Wall’s story begins far from Washington, D.C. boardrooms and industry summits. “Growing up, I was surrounded by people who built things,” he says.
“I learned the value of hard work, but also of community and how much more we can accomplish when we work together.”
After earning a degree in journalism from the University of Oregon, Wall gravitated toward the world of associations, spaces where communication, negotiation and alignment mean as much as technical skill. His career took shape in Oregon’s mechanical contracting community, where he led the Plumbing and Mechanical Contractors Association of Oregon (PMCA). There, he developed a reputation for diplomacy and results, fostering partnerships between labor and management that centered on shared goals: professionalism, safety, productivity and expanding union market share.
During that period, Wall didn’t just talk about collaboration, he institutionalized it. PMCA helped create a model of cooperation that gained national attention. His leadership earned him roles on several statewide boards, including the Oregon Workforce Development and Talent Board and the State Prevailing Wage Committee, where he influenced workforce policy and training standards.
In 2018, Oregon Gov. Kate Brown recognized his contributions with the Driving Force Award, honoring his exceptional work in expanding workforce development opportunities across the state. It was a milestone that validated Wall’s belief that progress in the skilled trades comes from listening as much as leading.
Wall’s success in Oregon paved the way for a broader platform. At the Mechanical Contractors Association of America (MCAA), he served as Executive Director of Operations, overseeing the John R. Gentile Foundation and managing day-to-day operations at the association’s national headquarters.
Those who’ve worked with him describe a leader who blends strategic thinking with a teacher’s patience. “He will bring the same dedication and steady leadership to SMACNA that he has demonstrated throughout his tenure with MCAA,” the association says. “His contributions have helped ensure MCAA remains strong, focused and well-positioned for the future.”
Beyond administration, Wall engaged directly in workforce training and leadership education. As a faculty member with C. Richard Barnes & Associates, he facilitated programs for the unionized electrical industry, drawing on his communication background to translate complex labor dynamics into actionable leadership lessons.
Now, as CEO of SMACNA, Wall inherits both opportunity and challenge. The sheet metal and HVAC industries face sweeping technological change, evolving labor markets and increasing demands for energy-efficient solutions. Wall’s approach, grounded in consensus-building, could prove decisive.
SMACNA, representing thousands of firms that design, fabricate and install ductwork, HVAC systems and architectural metal, has long prized technical excellence. Wall’s task is to ensure that excellence continues to equal influence. Early indications suggest that workforce development, contractor-labor collaboration and diversity in skilled trades will be key elements of his agenda.
“He’s uniquely equipped to navigate a rapidly changing industry,” Hill says. “Frank understands that innovation and labor relations aren’t opposing forces; they’re partners in progress.”
Away from the office, Wall’s life has been grounded by service. A longtime volunteer with the March of Dimes, he has held positions on its National Board of Trustees and National Volunteer Leadership Council, traveling the country to coach nonprofit boards on governance and strategic growth.
His motivation, friends say, always loops back to the same idea: people first. Married to his wife Colleen for 45 years, with two sons and three granddaughters, Wall sees continuity — not change — as the heartbeat of leadership. As he says, “Whether it’s in a family, a team or an industry, you build from trust.”







