Posts

Featured Post

CAREERTIP: Construction Professionals should start treating AI like a new colleague

Artificial intelligence (AI) isn’t going away and construction professionals need to embrace it and start working with it as if it were a new colleague. Across all industries, including construction, the adoption of AI is rapidly gaining momentum. This is because technology has finally advanced to the point where it can handle the complex and unstructured data involved in construction projects. Experts predict that AI will continue to develop into what they call "composite AI." Construction professionals, however, have some concerns about adopting AI. These concerns include: Regulatory Framework: Construction professionals must ensure that they comply with all applicable laws and regulations. They must also protect themselves, as AI can be programmed with specific guidelines to produce desired outputs. Ethics : There are important legal and ethical issues to consider when using AI. For example, who is liable if something goes wrong? Who is responsible if a disaster occurs as

VACANCIES: Site Agent

NEWS: Underground Climate Change Poses A Risk To A City’s Infrastructure

NEWS: Translating the strategy to decarbonising transport and infrastructure

NEWS: How Construction Productivity Gains Lead To Sustainability Benefits

NEWS: 5 ways to reduce mining and construction payment fraud in SA

NEWS: The iconic American hard hat job that has the highest level of open positions ever recorded

NEWS: Daylight robbery — construction mafia uses procurement policy muddle to take its cut

NEWS: SMEs can survive construction costs spike by focusing on government work

NEWS: Why Africa Talks So Much About Infrastructure?

NEWS: Is SA capable of returning from the path of destroying economic infrastructure?

VACANCIES: Commercial /QS Manager

NEWS: Close collaboration between academia and industry is essential to address the skills shortage

PROFILE: My journey to Professional Registration - Michelle Lewis

NEWS: Addressing the global infrastructure deficit in times of rapid climate change, decarbonization