AI Construction Providers

The AI Construction Authority providers catalog professionals, firms, and service providers operating across the United States construction sector where artificial intelligence tools, platforms, and methodologies are applied. This reference covers how providers are structured, what each entry contains, how the provider network maintains accuracy, and how practitioners and researchers can use provider data alongside other authoritative sources. The construction industry represents over $1.8 trillion in annual put-in-place spending (U.S. Census Bureau, Value of Construction Put in Place), making precise, navigable provider network infrastructure a functional necessity for procurement, compliance research, and workforce identification.

How Currency Is Maintained

Provider Network providers in a technology-adjacent construction context face a specific obsolescence problem: the AI tooling landscape changes faster than traditional construction licensing cycles. A firm's AI capabilities — the platforms deployed, the models integrated, the data pipelines in operation — may shift within a single project cycle, while state contractor licensing renewal periods commonly run 1 to 3 years.

The AI Construction Authority addresses this through a structured dual-layer verification process:

  1. Licensing credential verification — State-issued contractor licenses, engineer-of-record credentials, and specialty certifications are cross-referenced against issuing body databases. Regulatory oversight varies by state but falls under agencies such as state contractor licensing boards, state departments of labor, and in federally funded projects, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) compliance documentation.
  2. AI capability disclosure review — Firms self-report active AI platforms, integration scope (estimating, scheduling, safety monitoring, BIM automation, or predictive analytics), and the nature of AI involvement in their project delivery. These disclosures are flagged for re-verification on a defined calendar cycle rather than on demand only.
  3. Public record cross-check — Permit records, inspection outcomes, and project completion data accessible through local AHJ (Authority Having Jurisdiction) portals are used to validate active project status.
  4. Solicited correction pipeline — Professionals, project owners, and regulatory contacts can submit documented corrections. Corrections supported by official documentation are processed on a priority basis.

No provider network can guarantee real-time accuracy across all 50 state licensing jurisdictions. Providers reflect the most recently verified state and carry a disclosed verification reference period.

How to Use Providers Alongside Other Resources

The providers within this network function as a starting point for professional identification, not as a substitute for independent credential verification or procurement due diligence. For background on how to navigate this resource effectively, the How to Use This AI Construction Resource page provides structured guidance on search, filtering, and interpreting provider data.

Providers should be cross-referenced against:

For researchers studying AI adoption patterns in construction, provider data should be triangulated with industry reports from the Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) and the Construction Industry Institute (CII), neither of which is affiliated with this provider network.

How Providers Are Organized

Providers are classified along two primary axes: service role and AI integration category.

Service role classification follows standard construction industry divisions:

AI integration category distinguishes between:

This distinction matters because regulatory treatment differs: operational AI deployment on construction sites intersects with OSHA 29 CFR Part 1926 (construction safety standards), while administrative AI use typically falls outside site-safety jurisdiction and into data governance and procurement compliance frameworks.

Geographic filtering is available at the state, metro statistical area (MSA), and county levels, structured around the U.S. Census Bureau's standard geographic classification system.

What Each Provider Covers

Each verified provider contains a defined set of fields across 4 categories:

Identity and Licensing
- Legal business name and DBA designations
- State(s) of licensure with license numbers and issuing boards
- Primary NAICS code(s)
- Years in operation (where verifiable through public record)

AI Capability Profile
- Named AI platforms or tools in active use (e.g., Procore AI, Autodesk Construction IQ, OpenSpace, Buildots)
- AI integration scope: estimating, BIM, safety monitoring, scheduling, quality control, or predictive maintenance
- Deployment classification (operational, administrative, or hybrid) per the framework above

Project and Service Scope
- Construction market sectors served (commercial, infrastructure, healthcare, industrial, residential)
- Contract delivery methods supported (design-bid-build, design-build, CM at Risk, integrated project delivery)
- Bonding capacity tier where disclosed

Regulatory and Safety Indicators
- OSHA recordable incident rate (TRIR) where publicly available or voluntarily disclosed
- Safety program certifications (OSHA 10, OSHA 30, ANSI/ASSP Z10, ISNetworld, or equivalent)
- Active SAM.gov registration status for federally active firms

The full provider inventory and search interface are accessible through AI Construction Providers. Provider depth varies by firm size, disclosure level, and verification tier — entries marked as fully verified carry documentation references; entries marked as self-reported are pending third-party cross-check.

References

References