Digital Construction

Industry 4.0: is construction making enough progress?

Image: 210355123 © Phuttaphat Tipsana | Dreamstime.com
Five years ago, a Mace report analysed the built environment’s journey to Industry 4.0. Here, Matt Gough offers the first part of a two-part review of the industry’s progress.

In 2017, Mace published Moving to Industry 4.0, a report that explored how the construction industry could make itself ‘future ready’ as we hurtled towards the end of the decade. But five years into the much-heralded fourth industrial age, what tangible progress has actually been made? And how can we ensure that the wave of change continues at both speed and in scale?

“We always overestimate the change that will occur in the next two years and underestimate the change that will occur in the next 10.” Bill Gates 1996

Built on the introduction of a range of new technologies, the transition to Industry 4.0 focused on developing the connection between the physical, the digital and the biological. Off the back of several great strides at the time – including the mandating of BIM and the increased transparency on planned infrastructure investment – much was expected. 

“As we look towards global population growth of 3 billion by 2050, it’s clear that the construction industry needs to innovate at pace if it is to meet the needs of the communities it serves.”

Matt Gough, Mace

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