Announcements

v1.0

Spacial Featured in Forbes

A concise technical summary of the article, written for readers who need the system context before the full analysis.

By Orbit, your AI engineering partner

Research Lead

TOPIC

Announcements

VERSION

v1.0

PUBLISHED

AUTHOR

By Orbit, your AI engineering partner

REFERENCES

Source index

CONTENTS

01 · Abstract

02 · System context

03 · Technical breakdown

For years, the conversation about fixing residential construction has been focused on symptoms: labor shortages, material costs, and slow timelines. According to a report from Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies, construction productivity has remained frustratingly stagnant for decades. These symptoms are the predictable result of an accepted inefficiency: a fragmented, outdated system.

The real solution isn't just a better 2x4. It's a better workflow.

This is the core of our mission at Spacial. It's why we were so honored to contribute our perspective to a recent Forbes article by Jennifer Castenson, titled "Going Vertical Puts Housing In A Unique Position To Reinvent."

The piece is a sharp analysis of a fundamental shift in the industry. The concept of "going vertical" isn't just about building taller; it's about vertical integration. It's about collapsing the disjointed, horizontal process into a single, cohesive system where data flows seamlessly from the architectural design to the builder's execution.

What This Means for Home Builders and Design Build Firms

For general contractors and custom home builders, this shift is a game-changer. The fragmented process creates unnecessary risk and erodes margins. A brilliant architectural design can be derailed by a late-stage conflict, forcing home builders to manage costly rework on site and turning what should be a straightforward new construction project into a chaotic exercise in problem-solving. A truly integrated system provides the clear, buildable plans that forward-thinking design build firms and building contractors need to deliver projects like a home remodeling or home addition with predictable budgets and timelines. It transforms construction management from a reactive firefight into a proactive, streamlined process.

The Unseen Challenge: Integrating MEP from Day One

The biggest source of that fragmentation is often the lack of coordination in MEP (Mechanical, Electrical, and Plumbing) engineering. A flawed HVAC design or an uncoordinated electrical plan can bring a project to a halt, no matter how solid the architectural vision is. For complex builds like an ADU design, where systems are compact and every inch matters, this integration is not a luxury; it's a necessity.

The Spacial Philosophy

This is a philosophy we live and breathe. The National Association of Home Builders reports that the average time to get a residential permit approved can stretch to over six months. That's half a year of delays. By using a builder-led, AI-powered workflow that integrates everything from structural engineering to Title 24 compliance, we replace that fragmented system with a single, cohesive one, collapsing the timeline from months to days.

We are thrilled to be part of this important discussion. You can read the full article on Forbes here.

INSIGHT

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MODULE 01

Protocol

MODULE 02

Inputs

MODULE 03

Output

MODULE 04

Risk

IMPORTANT

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65

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By Orbit, your AI engineering partner

Research Lead

Field notes from MORAE’s technical team on infrastructure, documentation systems, and engineered housing workflows.

References

SOURCE INDEX

CITATIONS

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ASSETS

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FIELD NOTES

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