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Officials Reveal Top Technology Trends in Construction

Tue September 21, 2021 - West Edition #20
Carol Eaton, AGC California


The AGC of California highlighted a recent webinar featuring executives as they outlined the top technology trends in 
construction for a post-pandemic world.
The AGC of California highlighted a recent webinar featuring executives as they outlined the top technology trends in construction for a post-pandemic world.
The AGC of California highlighted a recent webinar featuring executives as they outlined the top technology trends in 
construction for a post-pandemic world. Data compatibility and interoperability among a myriad of technology platforms and software programs poses a major challenge. 
 Increased automation offers the benefits of productivity growth on the job site, which may help to offset the construction industry’s skilled labor shortage.

Over the last decade or so, the construction industry has been transformed by the growing adoption of new technologies and increased digitization. The onset of a global pandemic in 2020 only accelerated the pace of this change, fueled by remote work, greater demand for remote collaboration tools, continued migration to cloud-based programs and more.

A recent webinar by global software company Egnyte, "Construction and Engineering Technology Trends to Watch," highlighted some of the major innovations, trends and technology-related challenges facing the architecture, engineering and construction (AEC) industries today.

Omar Sheikh, senior professional services manager at Bluebeam, and Ronen Vengosh, vice president of AEC and Business Development at Egnyte, joined moderator and construction technology consultant Carole Filion in March for the technology forum. They discussed trends relating to remote technology, the growth of mass quantities of digital data on projects, 3-D modeling, design technologies such as building information modeling and other virtual design and construction tools, cloud computing, collaboration technologies, automation, design-build, data interoperability and systems integration.

"The pandemic has accelerated technology adoption across the AEC spectrum," Sheikh said. "Before the pandemic hit, a study showed that 44 percent of projects in the United States were still relying on paper. Hopefully that number has now shrunk significantly."

A few of the take-aways from the webinar (as well as from an offline conversation with the panelists) include the following:

Advances in cloud computing have enabled companies to leverage large amounts of data generated on projects in new ways. Sheikh cited the example of a large general contractor client that is pulling all of its data into a single repository and using artificial intelligence and machine learning algorithms "to really glean any insights that give them a competitive edge."

Remote collaboration, accelerated by the pandemic, has been essential to keeping the industry going. "Companies that were sitting on the sidelines, maybe migrating slowly towards using new technology, were kind of forced to deploy at scale very quickly," Vengosh said. "One of the legacies of the past year will be the fact that there is no turning back. [Companies now] understand how much more effective they are when everyone can collaborate remotely."

Data compatibility and interoperability among a myriad of technology platforms and software programs poses a major challenge. One issue the industry is grappling with: how to store massive amounts of data generated by a project in a common data format that can be easily accessed over the life cycle of that project.

Data security is another key issue that requires ongoing education for businesses in the AEC sectors. There is a common misconception that ransomware or cyberattacks are restricted to government entities or large, high profile companies. "It's not front-of-mind" for most small or medium size companies, Sheikh noted. "But we are as much at risk in the construction industry. The buildings that we build and infrastructure that we are creating is just as valuable."

More and more applications in design and modeling technologies are now generating vast quantities of data, totaling tens of thousands of points in the point cloud (datasets that represent objects or space). "How you get all this data and manage it is a big deal," Vengosh said. "More importantly is how you take it out of the job site and move it to where it needs to be consumed and processed."

When it comes to cloud computing, there needs to be a "holistic strategy for retaining, securing and managing data" according to Vengosh. "Folks aren't necessarily thinking about the cloud with a full plan for addressing those security and governance needs. It's coming but it needs to come faster."

Increased automation offers the benefits of productivity growth on the job site, which may help to offset the construction industry's skilled labor shortage.

Process automation is often overlooked, according to Sheikh. "To really be able to accelerate productivity, we don't just need automation through technology; we need automation from agreed-upon processes that cross disciplines and connect projects from design to handoff."




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