Jonatan Schumacher epitomizes a generation that has grown up with technology, and he is implementing this long-ingrained technical familiarity to keep his firm on the cutting edge and pull his older co-workers into the future.
“He has a very unique set of skills,” says Robert K. Otani, vice president of Thornton Tomasetti and Schumacher’s manager. “This complex skill set includes geometry, engineering and architecture—that’s a rare combination of skills. It weaves what we do as engineers to architects and fabricators.”