On May 11, BD+C hosted its first Accelerate Live! innovation conference, in Chicago, a multimedia event where an audience of more than 100 of the industry’s cognoscenti listened to a rapid-fire barrage of 15-minute presentations by 19 AEC experts.
Those lively talks approached innovation from just about every conceivable angle, from how gaming technology and machine learning redirect building design, to how artificial intelligence, SaaS (software as a service), and Big Data guide engineering and construction toward automation.
Each presentation offered useful kernels of information and examples that the audience could take away and apply to their own work. But one of the more thought-provoking comments I heard emerged from a post-event conversation with one of the presenters, Tyler Goss, Turner Construction Company’s Innovation Development Manager.
Goss observed that most, if not all, of the people in the room were already convinced that constant innovation is imperative to making buildings better and companies more successful. What was missing? “Skeptics” in the industry—those risk-averse, tech-allergic executives who view innovation and progress with suspicion, and sometimes with fear.
Skepticism is healthy and can weed out half-baked ideas. But even in an industry not exactly known for its farsightedness, resistance to change is no longer tenable, as more AEC firms reorganize themselves specifically to stimulate and test new ideas.
SmithGroupJJR essentially ushered in new leadership in 2014 in order to break free from its operational conservatism and to create a culture of innovation. Recalling that transition, Russ Sykes, PE, LEED AP, one of three Managing Partners who took the reins, said that SmithGroupJJR began offering innovation grants and initiated an emerging leaders program that enrolls 15 employees per year and involves participation by senior management.
Every one of the firm’s offices now incorporates virtual reality into its project management. And 25 of its engineers are dedicated to “looking at the future,” he said. As a result of these and other cultural changes, SmithGroupJJR is growing at a 15% annual clip, with higher profits.
What will separate great companies from merely good ones is how they manage change. Chris Mayer, Chief Innovation Officer for Suffolk Construction, explained how his company systematically evaluates each element of change via an integrated approach for planning and control that searches for the intersection of sustaining, disruptive, and transformative innovation.
That framework is the basis for Suffolk’s “build smart” approach, which starts with innovation labs that focus on R&D and early-adoption development. Ideas worth pursuing are then moved into a pilot stage to establish standards in the event these ideas get rolled out nationally.
Mayer cautioned, however, that companies will only be disappointed if they jump into a new idea or technology, such as drones, without researching how it would be used, and why it would benefit the company and its clients.
Related Stories
| Jun 13, 2017
Accelerate Live! talk: 3D laser scanning for the project lifecycle, FARO Technologies (sponsored)
Brent Slawnikowski of FARO Technologies and Jennifer Suerth of Pepper Construction discuss how implementation of laser scanning has helped Pepper become more successful in the completion of their projects.
| Jun 13, 2017
Accelerate Live! talk: Next-gen materials for the built environment, Blaine Brownell, Transmaterial
Architect and materials guru Blaine Brownell reveals emerging trends and applications that are transforming the technological capacity, environmental performance, and design potential of architecture.
| Jun 13, 2017
Accelerate Live! talk: Incubating innovation through R&D and product development, Jonatan Schumacher, Thornton Tomasetti
Thornton Tomasetti’s Jonatan Schumacher presents the firm’s business model for developing, incubating, and delivering cutting-edge tools and solutions for the firm, and the greater AEC market.
| Jun 13, 2017
Accelerate Live! talk: The future of computational design, Ben Juckes, Yazdani Studio of CannonDesign
Yazdani’s Ben Juckes discusses the firm’s tech-centric culture, where scripting has become an every-project occurrence and each designer regularly works with computational tools as part of their basic toolset.
| Jun 13, 2017
Accelerate Live! talk: A case for Big Data in construction, Graham Cranston, Simpson Gumpertz & Heger
Graham Cranston shares SGH’s efforts to take hold of its project data using mathematical optimization techniques and information-rich interactive visual graphics.
| Jun 13, 2017
Accelerate Live! talk: Scaling change in a changing industry, Chris Mayer, Suffolk Construction
Suffolk’s CIO Chris Mayer talks about the firm’s framework for vetting and implementing new technologies and processes.
| Jun 13, 2017
Accelerate Live! talk: Gaming tech in construction, Lucas Richmond, Gilbane
Learn why Gilbane’s Lucas Richmond is looking outside the AEC industry to build his rockstar gaming and media team.
| Jun 12, 2017
Accelerate Live! talk: From job site to factory, the future of commercial construction, Tyler Goss, Turner
Turner Construction’s Tyler Goss presents the construction giant’s breakthrough “job site as a factory” initiative.
| Jun 12, 2017
Accelerate Live! talk: The world's smartest buildings, Derik Eckhardt, Miller Hull Partnership
Discover what architect Derik Eckhardt learned during his worldwide tour of the globe’s smartest buildings, from Abu Dhabi to Amsterdam to Stuttgart to Dubai.
| Jun 12, 2017
Accelerate Live! talk: Preparing for the AI revolution, Alan Robles, Gensler
Gensler’s Alan Robles shares how the AEC Giant firm is preparing its project teams and clients for the coming artificial intelligence movement.