The Hardest Problems in Construction Have Nothing to Do with Tech
Many times, when something is wrong, we notice right away. Other times, it may take a friend pointing it out. But every so often, the most important lesson comes from a wakeup call. Literally.
That’s how it all started for Ian Gray, a long-time construction advisor and co-host of the Salty & Wired podcast. And while his first instinct was that he “must be the weird one,” he soon realized that the construction industry's hardest problems weren't living inside a process flow diagram or an RFI.
They were living inside the people building the projects.
The Trade Gap We Built Ourselves
Every so often a belief becomes so embedded in our culture that we stop questioning it entirely. Get good grades. Go to a good college. That’s the path to success.
It is a message that’s been repeated with such consistency that it feels less like advice and more like a rule.
But this story we’ve been telling ourselves might not be as solid as we thought. What do we do when the system we trusted suddenly stops working the way we were promised it would?
Celebrating Labor Day: A Tribute to the Hands That Built Our World
Few people know where I got my real start in construction. My dad had a bright idea to throw his punk kid on a landscaping crew to teach him the importance of hard work.
So, for two summers of my life, I pushed mowers, built decks, emptied garbage cans and sweated through every layer of clothing I had. There was nothing glamorous (or safe) about it, but those summers taught me something I’ll never forget: what it feels like to put your body on the line, day after day, in the service of work that shapes the community around you.
That’s what Labor Day is all about: celebrating the men and women who sweat, strain and sacrifice to make our built world possible.