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Before Problems Become Problems — There Is Context
An observation from the perimeter. C onstruction has never suffered from a lack of coordination. What it often lacks is a way to see structure before coordination turns into consequence. Most systems tell us what happened. Some tell us what is happening. Very few help us understand what is quietly forming — the subtle shifts in access, sequencing, adjacency, and responsibility that accumulate long before they register as delay or dispute. As projects grow more complex and tim

THE FLYING LIZARD
Feb 121 min read


Five Ideas Every Construction Company Should Understand (That Have Nothing to Do With Construction)
M ost construction challenges don’t fail because of materials, methods, or machines. They fail quietly—through decisions made too early, signals ignored too long, or responsibilities that slowly drift out of view. The most expensive lessons on a jobsite rarely come from construction itself, but from ideas that live outside it: how systems behave under pressure, how humans respond to uncertainty, and how absence—of attention, clarity, or ownership—creates risk long before anyt

THE FLYING LIZARD
Feb 42 min read


Schrödinger’s Construction Site: Why Projects Exist in Two States—Until Someone Really Looks
T here’s a famous thought experiment in physics known as Schrödinger’s Cat. A cat is placed in a sealed box with a device that has a random chance of killing it. According to quantum mechanics, until the box is opened and the system is observed, the cat exists in a strange state called superposition —both alive and dead at the same time. Absurd? Absolutely. Memorable? Undeniably. Schrödinger didn’t invent the experiment to suggest cats actually live this way. He created it t

THE FLYING LIZARD
Jan 253 min read
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