Manufacturing & Installation
Most building components can be precut, precast, or prefabricated against the project’s 3-D model. The result is a project that arrives on site already coordinated — components labeled, sequenced, and ready to install — instead of being figured out one trade at a time during construction.
What this changes for the project
Predictable construction
Most of the variability in a build comes from on-site improvisation. Component manufacturing against a coordinated model removes that variability before anyone breaks ground.
Higher quality, faster install
Labeled components install quickly with minimal supervision. Quality is duplicated project to project — not re-engineered every time.
Reduced callbacks and exposure
Fewer field decisions means fewer mistakes, fewer warranty issues, and a much smaller surface area for disputes after handover.
Stronger warranty position
Component-level documentation supports longer warranties and shorter construction durations — a meaningful competitive advantage against contractors building the traditional way.
Who benefits
General contractors gain predictability and warranty leverage. Subcontractors get clear, labeled work packages instead of having to reverse-engineer drawings on the fly. Owners get a building that was actually planned to be built — not assembled by improvisation.