Balfour Beatty sees human-free construction site by 2050
LONDON, June 27, 2017
Balfour Beatty, a major international infrastructure group, is foreseeing a human-free construction site in its paper “Innovation 2050: A Digital Future for the Infrastructure Industry” published recently.
The construction site of 2050 will be in stark contrast to what we see today with work moved off-site and remote control of machinery and new materials and techniques exploited to improve cost, safety and efficiency, it stated in the report.
While Balfour Beatty’s prediction for a human-free construction site may seem far-fetched, technology has already revolutionised contemporary life to such an extent that it’s not so hard to imagine radical changes for construction not least the emergence of new roles and the requirement and evolution of new skills to support delivery of the future pipeline of construction projects.
In its latest paper Balfour Beatty sets out to examine the pace and rate of change within the industry, with digital technology the catalyst and driver to such change; change that is already happening and is inevitable.
Exploring how business strategies will change, productivity levels will improve, and required skills will evolve, the paper presents how technology will:
•Help to bridge the skills gap by creating jobs, roles and industries that don’t yet exist and attracting younger generations to our industry, ultimately leading to a more agile workforce with new skills
•Benefit all stakeholders through increased productivity, improved efficiency and increased value and quality while helping to bridge the skills gap and up-skill our workforce
•Enable us to deliver projects for the public more efficiently and effectively through the use of such technology as Building Information Modelling, augmented and virtual reality, cloud data storage, telematics, drones and data analytics
Group CEO Leo Quinn said: "We are experiencing a digital revolution, redefining how we as an industry operate; becoming faster, better and more agile. By adopting and embracing the rise of digital solutions we are more able to deliver efficient, effective and safer solutions to our clients and customers."
"These changes will mean we have to ensure our industry trains our current and future employees with the skills to exploit the use of new technology, new materials and new methods of working," noted Quinn.
“Balfour Beatty has made significant progress in its vision to become a truly digitally empowered business, developing our internal capabilities, collaborating across our supply chain and partnering with the best technologically creative minds enabling us to be bold in the adoption of new and emerging technologies,” he added.-TradeArabia News Service