How does Bildstak work for data-center construction?
Bildstak protects data-center construction timelines by tracking long-lead MEP equipment, MEP coordination issues, commissioning readiness and change and cost — all federated so the team can see exactly what stands between current status and the speed-to-power date.
Data-center construction operates under one overriding constraint: the speed-to-power date. Delays to that date translate directly into revenue loss for the operator. Bildstak federates the systems that track the risks to that date.
Long-lead equipment tracking — connect the procurement register and the P6 schedule. Bildstak surfaces every item where the confirmed delivery date is drifting relative to the required-on-site date, with the critical-path impact visible alongside. Generators, transformers, switchgear and cooling equipment can all be tracked this way.
MEP coordination — read BCF issues from the MEP coordination workflow. Track open clashes, unresolved RFIs and interface risks between electrical, mechanical and IT infrastructure packages. Ask "how many open MEP coordination issues affect the critical path to energisation?" and get a cited answer.
Commissioning readiness — track which systems have open commissioning actions, incomplete test records or missing COBie data. Bildstak scores readiness at the system level so the commissioning manager knows exactly where the gaps are before the energisation window.
Change and cost control — join the ERP actuals to the P6 programme. Track variations against the approved budget and keep cost-at-completion current as the project evolves.
The Analyst — autonomously scans long-lead procurement, MEP coordination, commissioning and cost data to surface the top risks to the speed-to-power date with cross-source evidence, ranked by impact.
See the dedicated speed-to-power answer for detail on how Bildstak protects that critical milestone.
Updated 2026-06-19