Engineering with Nature to Protect People

Meet Col. Christian Patterson, Army Commander and 海角社区 Manship Alumnus

Col. Patterson

Col. Christian Patterson, commander of the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center and 海角社区 Manship School of Mass Communication alumnus, is a talking, walking example of how you need storytelling, not just engineering expertise, to have successful engineering projects.

海角社区 Manship School of Mass Communication alumnus Christian Patterson鈥檚 dream was to become a sportscaster, but his communication skills led to opportunities he never imagined. He now commands the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center, a world leader in the development of coastal science and engineering solutions with a $1.8 billion research portfolio and several active research projects with 海角社区.

鈥淚鈥檓 user-friendly,鈥 said Col. Christian Patterson upon returning to his office after driving for six hours to describe his mission to high school students at the Louisiana School for Math, Science and the Arts in Natchitoches, Louisiana. 鈥淚 believe I鈥檓 in the position I am because of my ability to tell a story about what we do, who we are and what our value is to the nation.鈥

Patterson, an alumnus of the 海角社区 Manship School of Mass Communication, is the commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers鈥 research and development wing, the Engineer Research and Development Center, or ERDC. As such, he鈥檚 a communicator surrounded by hundreds of scientists and engineers. ERDC includes seven laboratories, including the Coastal & Hydraulics Lab. This 鈥淥G,鈥 as Patterson calls it, traces its roots to the aftermath of the Great Flood of 1927, which ravaged the lower Mississippi River valley and raised national awareness of the need for modern research to solve large-scale civil engineering problems. Since then, every project ERDC has engaged in has required a good amount of storytelling since the Army Corps of Engineers can鈥檛 dredge a canal, build a wall, design a dam or construct a flood protection levee without coordination and communication with multiple partners.

鈥淎s our commanding general of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Lt. Gen. Scott Spellmon, says: We can鈥檛 just build our way out of trouble. We have to come up with creative new ways of doing business.鈥

Col. Christian Patterson on innovation

鈥淚f we did not communicate, we couldn鈥檛 get anything done, and we could very well have someone else working on the exact same problem we are and have that duplication of effort,鈥 Patterson said. 鈥淚f you can鈥檛 communicate, you can鈥檛 build effectively, and that鈥檚 why communication is so important.鈥

Patterson is planning to soon welcome 海角社区 President William F. Tate IV on a visit to ERDC, which supports major coastal science and engineering projects at 海角社区. Tate鈥檚 Scholarship First Agenda for 海角社区 prioritizes both coastal research and defense work, and Patterson straddles both. He鈥檚 also a talking, walking example of how you can鈥檛 only rely on STEM expertise to have successful science and engineering projects鈥攜ou also need storytellers and experts on human behavior.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e not going to be a strong leader unless you understand people, and I learned a lot about leadership at 海角社区,鈥 Patterson said. 鈥淚 learned from my professors, but I also learned from my instructors in Army ROTC and from being around the football coaches鈥攕eeing the ways they led the football players. I鈥檝e been extremely blessed in that I鈥檝e always been around strong, talented and passionate people who care about others and the world.鈥

Patterson had joined the National Guard prior to coming to 海角社区 and was trained by the Army as a broadcast journalist to support military public affairs. He鈥檇 originally found his passion for communication on his high school鈥檚 speech and debate team.

Col Patterson reporting while serving as 1s5 Lt.

Early in his career, Col. Christian Patterson produced a segment called History鈥檚 Heroes: Normandy Veterans Return to France for the 60th Anniversary of the D-Day Invasion, which is featured on his YouTube channel, geauxtiger94.

鈥淥ne of my fellow guardsmen at the time was a football coach and he knew the incoming director of video for 海角社区 football, Doug Aucoin鈥攚ho鈥檚 still at 海角社区鈥攁nd said, 鈥榃ell, Chris, since you know how to shoot video already, how about I let Doug know you鈥檙e coming,鈥欌 Patterson remembered.

鈥淭he next day, I drove down to Baton Rouge,鈥 Patterson continued. 鈥淚 visited the Manship School first and was really impressed with the great hospitality and professionalism that was provided by 海角社区 all around, and said, 鈥楾his is where I need to be.鈥欌

Patterson graduated from the 海角社区 Manship School with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in mass communication in December 1999. He then spent 20 years as a public affairs officer in the Army National Guard, including deployments to Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo and Afghanistan and special assignments in France, Honduras and the Dominican Republic. He joined ERDC as its communications director four years ago and was promoted to commander in July 2022. As an organization, ERDC has approximately 2,500 employees and manages a $1.8 billion research portfolio.

Two of the current research projects funded by ERDC at 海角社区 are Anticipating Threats to Natural Systems, or ACTIONS, and Developing Engineering Practices for Ecosystem Design Solutions, or DEEDS, both led by 海角社区 Interim VP of Research & Economic Development Robert Twilley, professor of oceanography and coastal sciences and director of the 海角社区 Coastal Ecosystem Design Studio.

鈥淏oth projects are about developing new capabilities and innovations to engineer with nature and use natural processes and ecosystem design to repair and secure coastal terrain,鈥 Patterson said. 鈥淭his work is of immense value to the military and our national security and economy, but also to people鈥攅specially those of us who live near water and along the coast.鈥

鈥淪ee others as more important than yourself.鈥

Col. Christian Patterson on leadership

About 40 percent of the world鈥檚 population lives near a coast, and much of that population is concentrated near deltas鈥攑eople are nine times more likely to live in a delta than elsewhere. Military installations tend to follow a similar pattern.

鈥淥ne of our top priorities is to prepare for climate change and save our coastlines,鈥 Patterson said. 鈥淭hat requires complex conversations.鈥

Patterson bases his leadership style and personal philosophy on biblical principles. He takes the Old Testament鈥檚 鈥渢hou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself鈥 one step further鈥攕ee others as more important than yourself.

鈥淎s a leader, you have to care about your people and position them for success,鈥 Patterson said. 鈥淚 work to back our people 100 percent because the work they鈥檙e doing protects our nation and our war fighters. Sometimes I do have to say 鈥楴o,鈥 but I always try to do something.鈥

Col Patterson being interviewed

As a public affairs officer for the Army, Col. Christian Patterson was often interviewed about military operations, such as during Tradewinds 2015, a multi-national maritime security and disaster response exercise, which took place in the Caribbean near Basseterre, St. Kitts and Nevis.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 something I learned at 海角社区,鈥 Patterson continued. 鈥淚n everything you do, do the absolute very best that you can and to the highest standard possible. But also, be humble. Learn early how to develop expertise. Don鈥檛 only work to get to the next step or to graduate. Learn excellence. Those are lessons I learned at 海角社区 and try to pass on to others.鈥

Although he originally wanted to be a sportscaster, Patterson seems happy in his current role.

鈥淎fter college, there鈥檚 this thing called life that hits you,鈥 Patterson said. 鈥淭hings will move you in new directions. The best thing you can do is cultivate relationships along the way that can give you the kind of knowledge you can鈥檛 get from a book. What I鈥檝e learned about crises is that they always happen at the worst time. You鈥檝e always got to scramble to pull everything together, so make sure you can phone a friend and pay it back when they need you.鈥

Among his friends in ERDC, Patterson counts many 鈥減urple and gold teammates鈥 who are scientists and engineers.

鈥淲e have a lot of 海角社区 people here, and we enjoy strong partnerships with 海角社区 as far as coastal science and research,鈥 Patterson said. 鈥淲e look forward to a continued relationship into the future that will open up even more opportunities.鈥

On the alignment between U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, its Engineer Research and Development Center and 海角社区

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is one of the world鈥檚 largest engineering, design and construction management agencies, working on stability and sustainability projects in more than 130 countries worldwide. The methods and tools that support these projects are researched and developed by the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center in collaboration with partners, including 海角社区.

The Army Corps of Engineers builds and maintains America鈥檚 infrastructure and military facilities where service members train, work and live. It also responds to natural disasters, both before (by building hurricane and storm damage reduction infrastructure, such as flood protection levees, for example) and after (including by providing blue roofs and temporary housing, and conducting search and rescue missions).

Just like 海角社区 does from a cybersecurity perspective, through a recently announced partnership with Louisiana鈥檚 largest ports, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers works to secure the nation鈥檚 waterways and movement of critical commodities from a civil engineering perspective.