What if every general superintendent had a room like this?
Not a corner office. Not an ivory tower. A command center.
Here’s what it looks like:
A central, open space where the core executive team sits together. No walls of separation.
Elevated desks around the perimeter where direct reports can come in and strategize.
A wall of screens streaming live jobsite cameras, drone footage, logistics maps, zone overviews, the Macro Takt Plan, and key project KPIs.
Whiteboards everywhere — for brain dumps, constraint tracking, and capturing hidden gems in real time.
Elevated desks around the perimeter where direct reports can come in and strategize.
A wall of screens streaming live jobsite cameras, drone footage, logistics maps, zone overviews, the Macro Takt Plan, and key project KPIs.
Whiteboards everywhere — for brain dumps, constraint tracking, and capturing hidden gems in real time.
A clock on the wall. A view of the actual jobsite through the windows. Coffee within reach.
The rhythm:
Start the day with field meetings. Walk the gemba.
Then return to the room to observe strategic plans, track hot items after trade huddles, drive out system roadblocks, and invest in make-ready planning for future phases.
Move fluidly between field and command center all day long.
Then return to the room to observe strategic plans, track hot items after trade huddles, drive out system roadblocks, and invest in make-ready planning for future phases.
Move fluidly between field and command center all day long.
The Empire State Building had runners carrying intel between leadership and the trades. This is the modern version — except the runners are field engineers, project coordinators, live cameras, and dashboards all feeding the general at once.
Picture Nick Fury coordinating the Avengers from the helicarrier. The field leaders are the Avengers. The situation room is S.H.I.E.L.D.
Generals can’t be everywhere. So we build the room that brings everywhere to them.
What would you put on your wall of screens?