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Ian pulled out a worn photo of that early-morning whiteboard, still showing the single circle. “The secret,” he said, “is that no one person owns a problem. Everyone owns the solution.”
For two hours, ideas flew. Some were terrible. Some were impossible. But then Rosa, the safety officer, said, “That unstable layer isn’t uniformly deep. What if we don’t fight it everywhere? What if we change the building footprints to put the heavy structures on the stable ground and use the unstable zone for green space, walking paths, and stormwater retention?” Ian Marlow Terra Group
Ian’s site superintendent, Carla, called him at 11 p.m. “We’ve got two choices,” she said. “Bring in ten times the aggregate and underpin everything, which blows the schedule by six months and adds $4 million. Or walk away and eat the penalties.” Ian pulled out a worn photo of that
They delivered Meridian Ridge seventy-two days behind schedule, not six months. The central park became a selling point, not a compromise. And Ian Marlow started a new Terra Group tradition: before any major crisis decision, he would draw a circle on a whiteboard and ask, “What would you do if you owned this problem?” Some were terrible
The story spread through the industry. Within two years, Terra Group had the lowest voluntary turnover and the highest bid-win rate in their region—not because they had the deepest pockets, but because they had the deepest bench of thinkers.
The young engineer, Malik, pulled up a laptop model. “If we shift Building D and E two hundred feet east and raise the retention pond as a central park feature, the load on the clay drops by seventy percent. We’d still need some soil improvement, but not a total rebuild.”