Mentioned in 50 AI use cases across 4 industries
Comments and markups made in Bluebeam on drawings can be shown inside the submittal record so reviewers can see what was marked up, by whom, and on which page.
When a construction document needs an updated version, the system copies the old one, bumps the revision number, lets the team edit key fields, and can notify the right reviewers automatically.
The system changes what each person sees based on their job and access rights, so they only get the tools and information they need.
Instead of scrolling through every submittal, a user can narrow the list on an iPhone using filters like open/closed, current revision, responsible party, location, and specification section.
The platform keeps work plans and material information updated so teams can stay aligned in near real time.
Workers on an Android device can drop a pin on a project drawing and connect it to an issue or observation so everyone can see exactly where the problem is.
Project teams can pull room or area locations from Revit into Procore and send grids over too, so everyone uses the same project map.
At the end of a project, it automatically gathers the paperwork history into an organized digital archive so teams can find what happened later.
Broccolini wants AI to turn all its project data into clearer answers for leaders, helping them see risks sooner and decide what to do without digging through scattered reports.
AI can help organize project documents, workflows and updates so teams spend less time chasing information and more time building.
AI can understand a request like 'give me all approved drawing files for this project handover' and automatically find, bundle, and deliver the right files while respecting access rules.
Instead of carrying paper plans and calling the office about changes, teams use digital drawings and documents in the field so everyone works from the latest version.
Project teams can update photo details like album, location, trade, and descriptions directly while viewing a jobsite photo instead of opening extra screens.
AI helps contractors choose billing schedules and payment terms that better match owner draw schedules and subcontractor payment obligations so cash does not get squeezed.
An AI planner could help teams draft a site-specific steel erection plan by asking the right questions and filling in required sections like crane placement, fall protection, material staging, and emergency response.
AI can turn all the status changes, linked records, messages, and proposal versions in a potential change order into a simple timeline and impact summary for project teams.
SEH planned drone flights in the cloud, sent the exact plan to other pilots, and repeated the same flight over time so teams could compare progress consistently.
When a project question (RFI) leads to extra work or cost, the system can turn that question into a draft potential change order so the team does not have to retype the same details.
It gives field teams a chat-style assistant trained on the company’s own rules and documents so they can quickly find the right procedure, safety guidance, or project information on site.
AI can compare owner requests against the original contract and closeout status to flag whether a request is a simple fix, a punch list item, or brand-new work that should be priced separately.
The system keeps a detailed card for each warranted piece of equipment, including where it is, what it is, who covers it, and how to contact them.
It helps builders use one online system to ask contractors questions, collect documents, review answers, and decide who is safe and qualified to hire.