Engineering

Sector — Engineering and construction

AI for Engineering and construction.

AI for engineering and construction firms that handle complex documents, big design files, and exacting compliance. Document intelligence, design AI, compliance automation.

Engineering and construction context

Engineering and construction are document-heavy, design-heavy, and compliance-heavy industries. The AI opportunity sits squarely in those three.

The industry runs on pdfs, drawings, specifications, and inspection records. Search across them is slow. Cross-reference across them is slower. Compliance against a moving target standard is slower still.

The shift is from generic search and naming conventions to agentic synthesis: ask the question, get the cross-referenced answer with citations to the source documents.

Where AI lands first.

Three to four AI opportunities specific to Engineering and construction operations. We start with the one most ready for production.

Document intelligence

Specification and tender intelligence

Pull requirements out of tender documents, find conflicts and gaps, generate first-pass response drafts grounded in your own past tenders.

Compliance

Code and standard cross-reference

Compare your design or scope against the relevant codes (NCC, AS, ISO). Surface the actual citations, not a summary.

Design AI

Repeatable design assistance

For repeated structural, civil, or services work, generate first-pass options that the senior engineer reviews instead of producing from scratch.

Field intelligence

Inspection and defect reporting

Computer vision for site inspection. Auto-tag defects to the relevant element of the drawing or BIM model.

Why us, for Engineering and construction.

We treat engineering documents as first-class citizens. We do not flatten them to text. Tables, drawings, embedded objects, multi-column layouts — all preserved through the pipeline.

And we ground every output in citations. The AI cannot make up a clause; it has to point to the page in the document. That is not optional in engineering.