b'I DONT ALWAYS KNOW ERIC WOLTERS:ALL THE ANSWERS, BUT BUILDING TRUSTI CAN
ALWAYS ASK THE AT EVERY TURNRIGHT QUESTIONS.Eric Wolters wasnt planning on
commercialToday, Eric splits his time between federal and construction.
First, he pursued a degree inmilitary projects. He sees his role as less
about architecture. Then he spent years working incommands and more about
trust.real estate and residential design. But when a friend connected him
to The Korte Company, heI dont always know all the answers, he said, but
discovered a new pathone that combined design,I can always ask the right
questions. He leads systems thinking, and fieldwork in a way that
feltsmall internal teams, mentoring new engineers more meaningful. on how
to balance confidence with humility. He trusts that in construction,
especially in regulated On his first large-scale job, Eric faced
theenvironments, success comes when people feel moment many new engineers
dread: telling asafe speaking up, not just following
directions.superintendent that a load path didnt match what was in the
structural drawings. There was a pause.Most of all, Eric believes in the
subtle difference The silence felt like a test. He braced for
pushback,between doing the job and owning it. That but instead, the
superintendent smiled. confidence grows when you know your craftwhen you
stay deliberate, remain curious and He told me thats exactly what were
supposedembrace that the best projects come when weto do, catch the things
that arent right, Eric said.build responsibly.From that moment, Eric
understood that The Korte Company wants people who dont simply follow
drawings. We want people who question them, check them and build with
integrity.78 79'