Design Concession Approver

Bristol
3 weeks ago
Create job alert

An established aerospace engineering organisation is seeking an experienced Design Concession Approver to support wing manufacturing and plant engineering activities at a major UK production site.

This role sits within a Plant Engineering function that provides critical engineering support to manufacturing operations and the wider supply chain, enabling complex structures to be delivered to final assembly lines safely, efficiently, and to the highest quality standards.

The Role
The successful candidate will act as a technical authority for manufacturing non-conformances, leading design investigations and delivering compliant engineering solutions that meet airworthiness, safety, and product integrity requirements.
This position offers the opportunity to operate at a senior technical level while influencing manufacturing outcomes, mentoring engineers, and driving continuous improvement across engineering processes.

Key Responsibilities

Lead design investigations and develop technical solutions for manufacturing non-conformances and design issues
Ensure all solutions meet applicable design, airworthiness, safety, and governance requirements
Act as a design approval signatory for manufacturing concessions (T200)
Serve as a focal point for technical governance, escalation, and decision-making
Provide technical guidance and mentoring to engineering team members
Collaborate closely with manufacturing engineering and other functions to deliver integrated solutions
Drive continuous improvement initiatives to enhance efficiency, quality, and robustness
Maintain clear reporting on critical technical issues to relevant stakeholders and delivery managers
Support a strong lessons-learned and feedback culture

Essential Skills & Experience

Current or previous Concession Design Approval (T200) - ESSENTIAL
Proven experience in aerospace structural design and/or plant engineering environments
Strong capability in leading complex technical investigations
Ability to communicate technical solutions clearly to a wide stakeholder group
Comfortable working autonomously while contributing effectively within a team
Demonstrates resilience, adaptability, and a proactive improvement mindset

Desirable Experience

Experience working on large aircraft wing structures
Exposure to major civil or military aircraft programmes
Previous involvement in high-rate manufacturing or complex production environments

Location & Working Arrangements

Primary base: Filton, with potential for Broughton for suitably experienced candidates
Hybrid working model applies (minimum 60% onsite / 3 days per week)
Flexible day shift pattern

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Senior Avionics Design Engineer

Senior Avionics Design Engineer

Electric Drive/Propulsion Integration Engineer Tue, 11 Nov 2025

Design/Development Engineer (Pressure Vessels) - Submarines

Design Engineer

Design Quality Assurance Manager

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Maths for Space Jobs: The Only Topics You Actually Need (& How to Learn Them)

UK space careers can look intimidating from the outside. Job adverts mention “systems engineering” “mission assurance” “GN&C” “RF” “payloads” “flight dynamics” “verification” “ECSS” & suddenly you’re wondering if you need a maths degree just to apply. You don’t. For most UK space jobs, the maths you actually use clusters into a handful of practical topics that map directly to real work across satellites, launch, ground segment, downstream data, mission ops & space software. This article strips it down to what matters most for job readiness plus a 6-week learning plan, portfolio projects & a resources section you can use immediately. UK space is also actively focused on growth & skills. The government’s National Space Strategy sets ambitions to grow the UK’s space ecosystem & spread employment across the UK. The Space Sector Skills Survey 2023 highlights recruitment challenges plus the importance of new skills & technologies including AI & ML. Recent industry reporting also estimates UK space industry employment at 55,550 FTEs plus wider supply-chain jobs. So learning the right maths is not an academic exercise. It’s a practical way to widen the roles you can credibly target.

Neurodiversity in UK Space Careers: Turning Different Thinking into a Superpower

The UK space sector has quietly become one of the most exciting places to build a career. From small satellites & launch services to Earth observation, navigation, in-orbit servicing & space data startups, the industry needs people who can solve hard problems in smart ways. Those people are not all “typical” engineers or scientists – and that’s a strength, not a weakness. If you live with ADHD, autism or dyslexia, you may have been told your brain is “too distracted”, “too literal” or “too disorganised” for precision work in the space sector. In reality, many of the traits that made school or previous jobs difficult can be major assets in space engineering, mission operations & space data roles. This guide is written for neurodivergent job seekers exploring UK space careers. We’ll look at: What neurodiversity means in a space industry context How ADHD, autism & dyslexia strengths map to common space roles Practical workplace adjustments you can request under UK law How to talk about neurodivergence in applications & interviews By the end, you’ll have a clearer sense of where you might thrive in the UK space sector – & how to turn “different thinking” into a genuine superpower.

Space Sector Hiring Trends 2026: What to Watch Out For (For Job Seekers & Recruiters)

The UK space sector is no longer a niche curiosity. It is now a strategic industry worth billions, employing tens of thousands of people across nearly 2,000 organisations – and it has been growing faster than the wider UK economy for years. At the same time, employers report serious skills shortages, especially in software, data and systems engineering, with recruitment and retention now cited as key barriers to growth. For job seekers, this is encouraging – but it does not mean every space application is an easy win. For recruiters, competing for talent with tech, defence, energy and finance is only getting harder. This article, written for www.ukspacejobs.co.uk , explores the space sector hiring trends to watch in 2026, aimed at both: Job seekers searching for terms like “space jobs in the UK”, “satellite jobs UK”, or “space engineer roles”; and Recruiters and hiring managers interested in “space sector hiring trends” and “space recruitment UK”.