Over the next five years, the U.S. military is expected to invest approximately $15 billion in residential housing alone - including barracks, dormitories, and single-family residences.
That is an enormous opportunity for the industrialized
construction industry. It is also a test.
The Department of Defense needs repeatable solutions that
can deliver high-quality buildings faster, with greater precision and
more predictable costs - often in locations where conventional
construction faces severe labor, logistics, and schedule
constraints. Residential housing like dormitories and barracks may be the
beachhead, but the implications extend much further.
Military fire stations, maintenance facilities,
administrative buildings, child development centers, training facilities,
and other repeatable building types can also benefit from industrialized
construction methodologies. The opportunity isn’t limited to a single product
category or delivery method. It includes panelized systems, bathroom and
kitchen pods, volumetric modules, prefabricated MEP assemblies,
componentized building systems, hybrid approaches, automation, digital
workflows, and additive manufacturing. No single delivery method will
serve every building type, market, or project condition.
The Industry Needs an Honest Conversation
That is why this year’s Industrialized Housing Summit
matters.
The Summit is technology-neutral by design. It brings
together the demand and supply sides of the market: owners, developers,
public-sector leaders, manufacturers, builders, investors, designers,
policymakers, and technology providers.
The goal is not to promote one solution, but rather
determine where different systems create real value, dig into what is
holding the industry back, and face what we must do differently for
industrialized construction to scale. This requires a candid analysis of what
is working, what is failing, and what must change.
Summit participants must be willing to wrestle with serious
questions:
● Where do panels, pods, volumetric modules, and hybrid
systems create the greatest value - and where do they not?
● What must owners change in procurement and financing to
support repeatable, scalable delivery?
● How can teams better integrate design, manufacturing,
logistics, and onsite assembly to improve cost, schedule, and quality
certainty?
● How does the industry move beyond isolated pilot projects
to create durable pipelines that support major customers, including the
military?
These are the practical barriers standing between promising
projects and an industrialized construction market capable of delivering at a meaningful scale.
A Major Signal From the Military
Representatives from the Naval Facilities Engineering
Systems Command, the Engineering and Expeditionary Warfare Center, and the Air
Force Civil Engineer Center will participate in the Summit to discuss the
military’s growing adoption of industrialized construction.
Through the Barracks Resilience Through Industrialized
Construction initiative and related efforts, the Department of Defense is
exploring how advanced manufacturing and offsite construction can help
recapitalize aging military housing, accelerate project delivery, improve
quality, and provide greater cost predictability.
“The Air Force is investing billions of dollars over the
next several years to recapitalize dormitories,” says Dr. Tim Sullivan,
Director, Facility Engineering for the U.S. Air Force Civil Engineer Center,
Facility Engineering Directorate (AFCEC/CF). “We are moving aggressively to
embrace Industrialized Construction to speed delivery and control costs while
providing exceptional living spaces for our Airmen and Guardians. Understanding
industry’s capabilities and constraints is critical to our success in this
effort.”
Franklin Fernandez, Shore Innovation Manager for NAVFAC’s
Engineering and Expeditionary Warfare Center, adds: “[We are] excited to
meet fellow, like-minded innovators who are motivated to partner with the U.S.
Department of War, and Navy and Marine Corps facilities experts to
achieve our goals more effectively.”
From Promising Alternative to Essential Capability
Industrialized construction is not a niche corner of the
building industry. It is an essential capability for owners that need to build
faster, manage risk more effectively, respond to labor constraints, and deliver
more consistent outcomes.
The military’s investment in residential housing could
become one of the most consequential market catalysts the industry has seen.
But capturing that opportunity will require more than optimism. It will require
honest conversations, stronger partnerships, better procurement models, and a
clear-eyed understanding of what works and what does not.
That is the purpose of the Industrialized Housing
Summit.
The Summit will take place July 23 and 24, 2026, at the
AT&T Hotel and Conference Center on the University of Texas at Austin
campus. Optional site visits to ICON and StudioBuilt by Amherst communities
will take place on July 23, followed by working sessions and discussions
through July 24. Learn more and register here:
Industrialized Housing Summit
Dr. Tim Sullivan, PE, NH-IV, DAF; and Franklin Fernandez, PE, MBA, will speak about the Industrialized Construction Barracks program for the military.
2025 Site visit participants at Falcon Structures in Texas. Photo courtesy Heather Wallace and Falcon Structures.The Industrialized Housing Summit provides meaningful networking opportunities. Photo: Nick Chumchal.



























