Faster Delivery, Smarter Builds: AI's Role in Healthcare Construction

Staff Report From Georgia CEO

Thursday, October 16th, 2025

 Healthcare systems that pair artificial intelligence with skilled construction teams can unlock shorter schedules, earlier delivery of beds and services, and accelerated revenue to sustain operations to fuel future growth, according to the latest Healthcare Insights report from DPR Construction, one of the nation's top technical builders.

"Technology alone can't build tomorrow's hospitals. It takes skilled design and construction partners who know how to harness it," said Carl Fleming, a healthcare strategist at DPR. "As AI reshapes how hospitals are planned, designed and built, the workforce must evolve alongside it—not to compete with machines, but to collaborate with them. Today (and for the foreseeable future) AI amplifies good decisions; it doesn't make them."

The report notes several ways that teams effectively leveraging AI are delivering value in new ways in healthcare construction:

  • More efficient scheduling – AI can transform scheduling from a tedious task into a proactive strategy. AI platforms can simulate dozens of build sequences in hours—not weeks—spotting bottlenecks, sequencing around active patient areas, and adapting in real-time. This also enables better coordination with facilities staff and smarter disruption planning.

  • Unlocking more BIM benefits – Visual analytics platforms can compare site conditions to Building Information Models nearly in real-time. These types of systems can identify anomalies as they happen, not weeks later, for things like MEP runs before ceiling closure. As a result, field teams have more time to act, avoiding costly rework and weeks of potential cascading delays.

  • Accelerated validation – MEP teams can use intelligent scanning tools to validate rough-in work in a matter of hours, instead of days. This helps minimize rework and maximize efficiency. Additionally, it frees skilled labor for installations, accelerating inspections, and keeping critical milestones on track – all without sacrificing precision.

"AI offers foresight. Experience turns it into action," Fleming said. "In healthcare, the real value of innovation has never been about the tools themselves. It's about what those tools make possible: safer care environments, more resilient operations, and facilities that perform as intelligently as they were designed and built."

Explore DPR's full Healthcare Insights series here, including the Constructing With Care Podcast