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Buildots Introduces AI-Powered Tool to Keep Construction Projects on Track

By Bernadette Salapare | May 16, 2024 09:37 AM EDT

With the objective of maintaining construction projects on schedule, Buildots recently released an AI-powered tool. This cutting-edge technology intends to avoid operational delays by promptly notifying teams of prospective issues.

(Photo : Unsplash/ThisisEngineering )

AI-Powered Tool That Mitigate Delays

On Wednesday, May 15, Buildots, an Israeli construction technology startup, introduced a new artificial intelligence tool that can anticipate potential hazards that could delay a project and warn management of pacing issues before they further develop. The company claims that its Delay Forecast platform also offers comprehensive insights into the factors contributing to delays, improving both the efficiency of decision-making processes and the effectiveness of operations.

Accordingly, following the discovery that 62% of construction site activities are progressing at a rate below initial projections, and 25% of those activities are operating at half the anticipated speed, Buildots devised the novel platform. Buildots noted that in partnership with the organization's Performance-Driven Construction Management (PDCM), the recently launched platform has reportedly reduced delays by 50% during global beta testing.

Moreover, the company highlights tasks that are at risk of running behind schedule by intuitively and comprehensively integrating the Delay Forecast function into the primary dashboard. It provides recommendations for pace modifications to prevent delays and estimates of projected delays, allowing it to quantify the implications of those risks. 

As mentioned, users can provide new pace estimates and see how these modifications can affect the timetable when they receive delay alerts. This allows them to optimize and fine-tune their plans and select the most effective way to proceed to the next step. Additionally, the dashboard allows project teams to monitor risk patterns on a weekly basis, enabling them to recognize the effects that their choices have in the real world.

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Other AI Tools Transforming Construction

Project Bernini, an artificial intelligence-driven 3D object creator, was introduced as Autodesk's next research endeavor. This program, named after Gian Lorenzo Bernini, an Italian sculptor and architect who worked during the 17th century, has an algorithm that can produce a detailed 3D model from a 2D image or even text inputs.

Unlike numerous 3D model generators, Autodesk asserts that Bernini can distinguish between apertures, surfaces, and shadows on a two-dimensional image, thereby circumventing perspective errors. For activities such as constructing components of a project or conceptual design, several architectural companies are developing their own 3D object generators powered by artificial intelligence.

Even though they both emphasized that Project Bernini is in its experimental phase, Hooman Shayani, senior principal AI research scientist at Autodesk, and Green agreed that it could potentially assist designers and contractors in the future in producing the 3D objects required for their projects. According to Autodesk, its models have the potential to manufacture geometrically accurate designs in the future if they are trained on buildings.

Furthermore, on Tuesday, May 7, at the Automate trade show in Chicago, NVIDIA announced that the software and artificial intelligence robotics startup Intrinsic has adopted the NVIDIA Isaac Manipulator platform to improve industrial automation with AI. As noted, Alphabet, the corporate entity that oversees Google, owns Intrinsic.

During the March GTC trade exhibition, NVIDIA presented the Isaac Manipulator to the public. Through the acceleration of artificial intelligence model training and task reprogramming, the Isaac Manipulator assists organizations that specialize in industrial automation in developing scalable and reproducible workflows for dynamic manipulation tasks. Isaac-enabled processes from Alphabet and Intrinsic could assist suppliers in automating the creation of building materials and even provide information for prefabrication on construction projects, even though they are not explicitly an AEC technology.

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