Build Perspectives Podcast

Tim Seims and Carolina Baffigo

We bridge Wall Street and Job Sites. Real stories, real numbers, real consequences. Hosted by Carolina Baffigo and Tim Seims. https://tinyurl.com/Build-Perspectives

  1. 1일 전

    Decarbonizing Construction w/ Denyse Von Opbergen (EllisDon)

    We're joined by Denyse Von Opbergen, Director of Climate and Sustainability at EllisDon — one of Canada's largest general contractors — to work through what decarbonizing construction actually looks like inside a project, not on a slide. Denyse walks us through the influence-versus-control frame she uses to move the needle on scope 3 emissions a contractor can't dictate, the "no silver bullet" filter that weighs Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) against lead time, cost, and constructability, and why the transition to a decarbonized industry doesn't run brown-to-green — it runs through the murky green middle, including the roads and infrastructure that make sustainability possible in the first place. What we cover: How EllisDon sets its own sustainability targets and tracks scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions What contractors actually ask manufacturers for beyond EPDs and why the right people in the room matters more than the perfect document Why pre-construction is where decarbonization is won or value-engineered out The "pilot small, then scale" playbook for de-risking new low-carbon materials (starting in landscape work before foundations) Recent projects: the PNE Amphitheater (mass timber, British Columbia) and the new Surrey Hospital (embodied carbon reduction through concrete mix optimization) Where the industry is still getting decarbonization wrong — and why the biggest barrier isn't technology, it's process The Canadian Construction Sustainability Alliance and what nine GCs collaborating unlocks that individual companies can't What Denyse hopes to bring back from Advancing Construction Decarbonization in Denver Chapters: (0:00) Meet Denyse Von Opbergen from EllisDon (2:00) Translator — the identity of a climate lead (5:00) How EllisDon sets its sustainability targets (6:00) The Canadian Construction Sustainability Alliance (8:00) Scope 1, 2, 3 — influence versus control (10:00) No silver bullet — the "on this project" filter (13:00) Why early conversations kill the trade-off (17:00) Pilot low-risk before you scale (20:00) PNE Amphitheater and Surrey Hospital (22:00) Where the industry keeps getting decarb wrong (28:00) Where the biggest emissions spikes actually live (33:00) Build the infrastructure that enables sustainability (34:00) Murky green — what the transition actually looks like About the guest: Denyse Von Opbergen is Director of Climate and Sustainability at EllisDon, one of the largest general contractors in Canada. She started in public policy in the Netherlands, moved through consulting in Toronto, and now runs EllisDon's climate strategy across a decentralized global construction business. Denyse will be a headliner at Advancing Construction Decarbonization in Denver, July 28-30. About Build Perspectives: Build Perspectives is a podcast for building products sales leaders, construction executives, and the investors and innovators shaping where the industry goes next. Hosted by Carolina Baffigo (Spec to Scale, Project Fluent) and Tim Seims (Profit Arc). New episodes weekly. Sponsor: This episode is brought to you by Advancing Construction Decarbonization in Denver, July 28-30.  Homepage: https://ter.li/flqg1e1v Full Event Guide: https://ter.li/u995rat5 Registration: https://ter.li/7ioh2p6w Use Discount code BUILDPERSPECTIVES10 for 10% off admission.  Connect: Denyse Von Opbergen — LinkedIn EllisDon — ellisdon.com Carolina Baffigo — LinkedIn / carolinabaffigo.com Build Perspectives — LinkedIn

    36분
  2. 5일 전

    "We've More Than Cracked the Code": 90% Complete Facades Before Moduled Leaves the Factory

    Recorded live at Advancing Prefabrication 2026 in Dallas, Tim walks the expo floor with James Haas, who leads modular and prefab efforts at Nichiha. (At the time of recording, Tim was also wearing a Nichiha hat. He's since moved on to a new adventure.)  The conversation everyone's having at Advancing Prefab this year? Data centers. But not the windowless boxes of yesteryear, municipalities are now mandating warmer, more inviting exteriors, and grid entropy is forcing data centers closer to urban cores where looks actually matter. That's a facade opportunity hiding in plain sight. James pulls back the curtain on Nichiha's new AIA-certified CEU course tackling the industry's oldest bugaboo: mate line and plate line transitions. The unlock is a deceptively simple two-piece trim - base plate installed in the factory, face plate popped on after modules are stacked and stitched - letting manufacturers ship facades 85–90% complete instead of leaving whole panel runs off for field weaving. Proof points range from 7 Brew coffee shops delivered with 100% of the facade installed to major healthcare expansions hitting 80–90% factory completion. CATCH THE LATEST IN MEP PREFAB Advancing Electrical Prefabrication: Dallas, July 22–24, 2026 Listeners get 10% off with code BPMP63295 https://advancing-electrical-prefabrication.com/ Also in this episode: Why the winning value prop isn't cost savings. It's certainty: material certainty, speed to occupancy, and getting out of the construction loan faster James's two-to-three degrees of separation theory: your next contact is probably already in your phone A challenge to event organizers: map how the industry actually connects, and get every trade it takes to deliver a building into one room A teaser for a future episode breaking down how developers actually underwrite deals: pro formas, cap rates, and where prefab moves the valuation needle Thanks to our sponsors ProjectFluent and Advancing Prefabrication (Hanson Wade) for making this episode free for listeners. Connect with James Haas on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-haas-0a4832b0/ to learn more about Nichiha's prefab facade solutions.

    18분
  3. Prefab Isn't the Future of Construction. It's the Gold Standard! (and Gen Z Just Wants to Know "Why?")

    6월 24일

    Prefab Isn't the Future of Construction. It's the Gold Standard! (and Gen Z Just Wants to Know "Why?")

    Andrew Layman runs prefab at Enterprise Electrical, and he'll tell you prefab isn't the future of construction - it's already the gold standard. BUT, the line that stuck with us came at the end: this next generation coming into the trades isn't lazy or soft, they just want to know "why". Andrew makes the case that "respect for people" is an actual lean pillar, that the prefab shop is the best classroom we've got, and that the contractors who get both right are the ones who'll actually solve the labor problem. In this one: Why prefab stopped being "the future" and became the baseline, and what that means for ECs still treating it as a nice-to-have The shift from "do it exactly like this" to explaining the "WHY?" And how THAT is a recruiting edge, not a concession How a green apprentice can leave the prefab shop as the most proficient conduit bender on the job in under a year "Money is no object" data center jobs, 60 generators on one site, and why that's a prefab dream The Toyota line about seats and dashboards that reframes trade stacking for good Why "we don't expect you to read a tape measure yet" might be the most respectful thing a shop can say Brought to you free by Spec2Scale and Advancing Electrical Prefabrication. CATCH ANDREW AT THE EVENT HE'S CHAIRING Advancing Electrical Prefabrication — Dallas, July 22–24, 2026 Listeners get 10% off with code BPMP63295 https://advancing-electrical-prefabrication.com/ CONNECT Andrew Layman: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrewlayman99/ Enterprise Electrical: https://www.linkedin.com/company/enterprise-electrical-commercial-and-industrial-electrical-contractor-for-houston-tx/ https://enterpriseelectricalco.com/ Chapters (help Spotify/Apple/YouTube surface and chapter the episode): 00:00 Meet Tim & Carolina 01:00 Guest intro: Andrew Layman, Enterprise 02:30 Lean meets prefab 05:30 Kaizen, Gemba & the eight wastes 08:00 What Andrew wants suppliers to know 11:30 Vendors & customer experience 13:30 Selling prefab as risk mitigation 16:00 Prefab as boot camp 20:00 Data centers & the labor squeeze 22:30 Trade stacking & coordination 26:30 Conference preview 29:30 The "why" generation 36:00 Wrap-up & discount code

    39분
  4. 5월 14일

    Smart Tag It: How Flintco Is Turning the Morning Huddle Into Safety Leadership

    Safety leadership isn't about rules. It's about seeing people who've never been seen. Recorded live at Advancing Safety Leadership in Dallas, we sit down with Shane Harris and Lane Smith of Flintco to talk about how a 115-year-old GC is using recorded morning huddles, AI-powered conversation analytics, and a deep culture-change investment to close the gap between the planning table and the frontline crew. This is what happens when you stop treating the pre-task plan as paperwork and start treating it as the tip of the spear. Key Topics Covered: Planning as the tip of the spear — why the entire investment in a project ultimately lands on the frontline leader's five-minute morning huddle, and why the industry has ignored it for too long The paper PTP problem — how the industry has been saying one thing and doing another every morning, and what it actually costs in safety culture Smart Tag It and the Spanish-speaking workforce — how AI translation is bypassing the language gatekeeper to reach 80% of Texas construction crews previously invisible to safety leadership Question quality as a measurable leadership metric — why "what's our goal for the day?" changes everything Culture before technology — the JMJ investment, the lunch-and-learns, and why Flintco lost a third of its staff on purpose to get where it is today Connect with Shane and Lane: Find them on LinkedIn or visit flintco.com Flintco Safety Music Videos on YouTube: Search: Flintco Lazy Man Load | Flintco Egg Man | Flintco Shortcut https://youtu.be/tbFNXcxg8rU

    1시간 10분
  5. 4월 7일

    "I Just Need Someone to See Me Today" | Your Benefits Package Includes Kindness

    When Scott Satory started his industrial roofing company 17 years ago with $10,000 and no capital for medical benefits, he made a decision. He'd pay people fairly, give them holidays and vacation from day one, and treat them like human beings. He figured he'd see how that worked out. It worked out. Debt-free. Multimillion dollars. 17 and a half years later. His wife Dr. Colleen Saringer spent that same stretch inside corporate America, consulting companies on workplace mental health and watching them not do it. In 2023 she left to keynote construction companies directly, because construction has one of the highest suicide rates of any industry. More suicides than on-site injuries. And the number is underreported. Together they keynote on what it looks like to build a business and a life in construction without it killing you. Literally. Quick note about Upcoming Events 🏗️ Advancing Construction Leadership | April 28–29, Dallas TX | Safety as a catalyst, not a checkbox. Use code BUILDPERSPECTIVES10 for 10% off → advancing-construction-safety-leadership.com Tim and Carolina caught up with Colleen and Scott on a sunny afternoon at Monday Night Brewing in Atlanta — and what started as a conversation about running a construction family became something harder to shake than that. Colleen's father nearly took his life when she was 13. Scott's two brothers both had heart attacks before 52. Scott is 52 and fine. He has a theory about why. They get into: the coffee pot at 11:30pm that almost broke things, why kindness is a risk management strategy backed by actual research, what survivor accounts say people needed in their darkest moments, why small contractors can't buy loyalty but can absolutely earn it, and what building product manufacturers keep getting wrong when they go quiet on a sub. One line from the research Colleen cites: people who had considered ending their life said, "I just need someone to see me today." A smile. A good morning. Knowing the dumpster driver's name. That's the episode. Find Colleen at colleensaringer.com and on LinkedIn. Connect with Scott the same way. Brought to you by ProjectFluent and the Advancing Construction event series from Hanson Wade.

    45분
  6. 3월 26일

    "There Are Plenty of Platforms for Scheduling Software. We're Looking for People Actually Building Things."

    What Would It Take to Actually Fix Housing? Tyler Pullen of Terner Labs & UC Berkeley on policy, prefab, and the graveyard of good ideas. Tyler Pullen doesn't traffic in buzzwords. As leader of the Building Innovation Track at Terner Labs, the nonprofit accelerator spun out of UC Berkeley's Terner Center for Housing Innovation, he's spent years separating companies actually building homes from the ones just building pitch decks. Recorded live on the expo floor in Dallas, Tyler gets candid about what it really takes to move the needle on housing affordability: 70 expert interviews in a single month, a dozen California bills already in motion, and the stubborn truth that the biggest barrier to innovation in housing isn't engineering. It's navigating the humans. We cover the forthcoming California building innovation white paper, why hardware is categorically harder than software, and what innovators consistently get wrong when they try to enter the housing market without speaking the language. Download the "Potential Pathways to Scale Innovative Construction Methods in California" white paper here https://ternercenter.berkeley.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/PathwaystoScaleInnovativeConstruction2026.pdf Apply to the Terner Labs Building Innovation Track: ternerlabs.org Reach Tyler directly: tpullen@berkeley.edu Upcoming Events 🏗️ Advancing Construction Leadership | April 28–29, Dallas TX — Safety as a catalyst, not a checkbox. Use code BUILDPERSPECTIVES10 for 10% off → advancing-construction-safety-leadership.com 🌲 Int'l Mass Timber Conference | March 30–April 1, Portland OR — Use code IMTC26_SEIMS10 for 10% off → masstimberconference.com

    22분
  7. 3월 20일

    Prefab at Scale: Robert Crotty on Building Healthcare's Offsite Ecosystem

    Recorded live on the expo floor at Advancing Prefab 2026 in Dallas, this conversation with Robert Crotty, VP of Design & Construction at HCA Healthcare, is a masterclass in what it actually takes to run prefab as a program, not a project. Robert was hired by HCA a decade ago to advance offsite construction, and the timing of this recording, at an event literally named Advancing Prefab, wasn't lost on either of us. We cover how a major health system tests, refines, and scales prefab components across hundreds of in-flight projects, why healthcare is the right proving ground for innovations that will eventually reach housing, and what manufacturers and trade contractors should be thinking about during slow periods. Key topics below! 🌲 Upcoming Events: Advancing Construction Leadership (APRIL 28-29, 2026 IN DALLAS TX) US employers reported 1.3 million workplace injuries IN 2024, and construction still sees some of the highest rates of serious harm. Leading firms recognize that safety is a catalyst for innovation, project quality, and profitability. The question remains: How do we bridge the gap between the boardroom and the boots on the ground? Use code BUILDPERSPECTIVES10 to save 10% off at registration. Register at: https://advancing-construction-safety-leadership.com/ International Mass Timber Conference (IMTC) March 30 – April 1, 2026 | Portland, OR The premier gathering for the mass timber and tall wood building industry. Build Perspectives listeners get an exclusive discount! Use code IMTC26_SEIMS10 to save 10% off at registration. Register at: masstimberconference.com Key Topics Covered in This Pod: How HCA manages hundreds of concurrent projects — from lobby refurbs to new hospital builds — using an incremental construction model that mirrors community demand curves and reduces the risk of large-scale prefab commitments gone wrong. Why moving work off-site typically delivers a 2x productivity improvement, and how that math becomes a survival strategy when 400,000 skilled tradespeople are leaving the industry with no pipeline of replacements. The case for making prefab decisions early in design — not late — and how HCA's partner program cross-trains GC teams by sending them to watch live installs before they're responsible for one. Why healthcare construction (often $1,000+/SF) is the innovation proving ground that makes prefab better and cheaper for housing and hospitality over time — and Robert's advice for factory operators on using off-peak demand to train workforce rather than curtail operations. How smaller health systems, trade contractors, and manufacturers can think programmatically about prefab without HCA's volume — through GPOs, collaborative buying, and latching onto GCs already building their own offsite capacity. The Toyota Production System truth that construction keeps learning the hard way: you can tour every factory you want, but without the culture, none of it sticks. Connect with Robert Crotty on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robertcrotty/ This episode was recorded live at Advancing Prefabrication 2026 in Dallas and made possible by the support of Project Fluent and the Advancing Construction event series. Learn more at www.advancing-prefabrication.com. Build Perspectives is hosted by Tim Seims and Carolina Baffigo. If this conversation resonated, please subscribe, leave a rating, and share with someone in your network who needs to hear it.

    20분
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We bridge Wall Street and Job Sites. Real stories, real numbers, real consequences. Hosted by Carolina Baffigo and Tim Seims. https://tinyurl.com/Build-Perspectives