The Law Offices of John Caravella, P.C. does not own this content. This content was create by Matthew Thibault of ConstructionDive, and was published on January 8th, 2025.
In an era of rapid technological advancement for the construction industry, one piece of technology looms above the rest in status and notoriety — artificial intelligence.
Its omnipresence in the larger business conversation has not escaped construction. While industry pros took a cautious stance toward the tech after its widespread release in late 2022, contractors are now increasingly turning to AI in order to solve business problems, largely via chat-like interfaces that serve up hard-to-find project specs with just a few keystrokes.
For example, London-based Balfour Beatty is in the process of developing StoaOne, a large language model generative AI assistant that will help employees mine what Kasey Bevans, Balfour Beatty US chief information officer, calls “untold billions of data points.”
“To our teammates, it will feel like StoaOne is talking to them, providing instant insights and project information as they procure, plan and execute their projects,” Bevans said in an email to Construction Dive.
Swedish contractor Skanska is also working on its own AI helper — Sidekick, a generative AI chatbot built on the same technology as ChatGPT, which will help employees at the company plumb the firm’s collective expertise on projects and problems. The company told Construction Dive that Sidekick had seen over 2,500 interactions during the 30 days prior to Dec. 16, when Skanska pulled the data.
Using AI in this way addresses one of construction’s oldest and most fundamental challenges – namely, culling together and making sense of information from hundreds and even thousands of stakeholders on a project in an industry that is more fragmented than unified. The result has been an AI arms race among contractors to develop tools — or bolt them together off the shelf — to make sense of myriad data sources in seconds.
“Data is everywhere, and it’s unstructured, and the challenge that I’ve had over the last four or five years is coming up with the right meta tagging schemes or structures to make them universally useful to everyone,” said Mike Zeppieri, vice president of emerging technology at Skanska USA. “What AI has allowed us to do is not have to worry about that as much, as long as we build it into a data model.”
To view the full article, please click here:
The Law Offices of John Caravella, P.C. does not own this content. This content was create by Matthew Thibault of ConstructionDive, and was published on January 8th, 2025.

John Caravella Esq., is a construction attorney and formerly practicing project architect at The Law Office of John Caravella, P.C., representing architects, engineers, contractors, subcontractors, and owners in all phases of contract preparation, litigation, and arbitration across New York and Florida. He also serves as an arbitrator to the American Arbitration Association Construction Industry Panel. Mr. Caravella can be reached by email: John@LIConstructionLaw.com or (631) 608-1346.