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The AI Gold Mine Has a Construction Problem - #0082, Erez Dror

The physical infrastructure powering the AI economy is under more pressure than at any point in history. Now, a $166 million Israeli startup thinks it has the answer.

Everyone is talking about a water crisis brought on by AI use. But think of this: the data centers powering the AI economy are not built from code. They require concrete, steel, cranes, and the coordination of hundreds of subcontractors across millions of square feet of new floor space.

And right now, the construction industry is struggling to keep up.

Capital expenditure from the 14 largest publicly owned data center operators globally is projected to approach $750 billion in 2026, up from under $450 billion the year prior. The Stargate Project alone, a multi-year, $500 billion plan to deliver up to 10 gigawatts of AI-ready power, was formed as a joint venture between OpenAI, SoftBank, Oracle, and MGXis and spans multiple U.S. states.

Meanwhile, the median cost of building a data center hit $445 per square foot this year, up 7.4% from 2025, with average costs skewed far higher by hyperscale projects. The pipeline is enormous, and yet the pressure on builders to deliver is greater still.

Erez Dror has seen this shift from both sides. A structural engineer and former construction superintendent who spent over a decade on job sites in Israel, he co-founded workforce intelligence platform, Genda, which last year was acquired by Buildots after a $5.5 million Seed round. He recently stepped into the new role of VP of General Contractors & Genda at Buildots, which to date has raised $166 million.

After the acquisition, the joint entity is now positioning itself as the operational backbone for exactly the kind of complex, fast-moving builds that the AI infrastructure boom demands.

“A product executive who worked on the biggest project Genda was on, a $600 million project, took them four years to build,” Dror told me. “He moved to build one of the biggest data centers in the U.S., which was $6 billion — 10x the scale — and they built it in three years. A year less, and 10x times the scale.”

The compression reflects a new standard being set by hyperscalers who come from a software-first culture and expect physical construction to behave accordingly. “A person who works for Google and is used to building software that doesn’t break expects to get a building that doesn’t break at the same quality,” he said. “They’re setting a new standard, which I believe will eventually trickle down to everything.”

The challenge is that construction remains one of the most fragmented, data-poor industries in the global economy. Unlike a tech organization, where a single executive decision can transform operations overnight, construction is built around individual projects with its own lead, subcontractors, or even its own tolerance for disruption. Change management, Dror argues, is “just a different beast.”

That fragmentation is precisely what Buildots is trying to solve. The platform ingests two data streams: weekly 360-degree camera footage from job sites and the project’s 3D building model, to use computer vision to identify what has been built versus what was planned.

Genda, meanwhile, tracks where workers are on-site in real time, anonymously, using an app-based system that Dror designed around behavioral incentives rather than hardware. Together, Buildots says the platforms offer visibility into both the work being completed and the labour required to complete it.

“We know the output, we know the input… we know what was built, and we know what efforts or how many resources were needed to get there,” Dror explained. “We’re the only solution in the world that can provide you with the full picture. Not even at scale — just to provide that.”

In April, Buildots formally launched a new product category, which it is calling “construction intelligence”. It frames itself as the operational platform for an industry that can no longer afford to rely on gut instinct and fragmented spreadsheets. And as data center construction starts reached $9.8 billion per month through April 2026 (300% more than levels seen a year ago), the timing for a platform that can turn chaotic job sites into predictable delivery machines has never been better.

“When you need to build a facility like a data center that is very detail-oriented, and you need to build it very fast, and every day of delay is millions, if not tens of millions, if not billions, in liquidated damages, you really need to make sure you finish on time and you know what the hell is going on in your project,” he added.

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