For years, the offsite construction industry has talked about its aging workforce, the loss of experienced tradespeople, and the difficulty of attracting young people into factories. We attend conferences, form committees, write reports, and continue asking where the next generation of production workers, designers, engineers, supervisors, and innovators will come from.
The answer may already be standing in our high schools, technical education programs, robotics clubs, welding classes, and career centers. Generation Alpha is coming, and offsite construction should begin reaching out to them now instead of waiting until they start looking for careers.
Generally defined as those born beginning in 2010, the oldest members of Gen Alpha are already about 16 years old. Within just a few years, they will begin entering colleges, trade schools, apprenticeships, engineering programs, and the workplace. They will bring something our industry desperately needs: an instinctive ability to move between the physical and digital worlds without seeing them as separate places.
AI Will Simply Be Another Tool
Most people currently working in offsite construction are still deciding how they feel about artificial intelligence. Some are experimenting with it, others are skeptical, and many are waiting for someone else to prove its value before using it.
Gen Alpha will probably find that debate rather amusing. They are growing up with AI as a study partner, research assistant, creative tool, and problem solver. They will not enter a modular factory asking whether AI should be used. They will look at our estimating, scheduling, quality control, design, purchasing, and production systems and ask why it isn’t already being used everywhere.
A young employee might use AI to interpret plans, prepare material lists, compare design alternatives, locate scheduling conflicts, write inspection reports, or search technical manuals in seconds. They will not necessarily view AI as something that replaces people. To them, it may simply be another tool sitting beside the tape measure, impact driver, tablet, and laser level.
They Will Understand Pictures Before Paperwork
Gen Alpha has grown up learning through video, animation, games, simulations, and interactive screens. Many of them may understand a three-dimensional model more quickly than a two-dimensional drawing filled with symbols, notes, and revision clouds.
That should make them comfortable with BIM, digital twins, augmented-reality work instructions, virtual factory layouts, 3D configurators, and automated clash detection. Show them a digital model of a module, allow them to rotate it, remove layers, and see exactly where a plumbing penetration or electrical connection belongs, and they may absorb the information almost immediately.
That does not mean printed plans will disappear, but it does mean factories will need to rethink how production information is delivered. A faded set of drawings taped to a workbench may not be enough for a generation accustomed to information that is visual, searchable, current, and interactive.
They Will Learn When the Problem Appears
Older generations were usually trained first and expected to remember the information when it was needed later. Gen Alpha is growing up in a world where instructions are available the moment a problem arises.
A production worker could scan a QR code at a workstation, watch a short installation video, complete the task, photograph the finished work, and add it to the module’s digital record. If the procedure changes, the factory can update the video rather than wait for every employee to receive another round of classroom training.
This learning style could make cross-training easier and faster. Rather than spending months performing only one task, digitally supported employees might move between framing, mechanical installation, finishing, material handling, and quality control. The factory would still need experienced trainers, but those trainers could spend more time teaching judgment and craftsmanship instead of repeatedly explaining basic procedures.
Repetitive Work Will Look Like an Opportunity
Previous generations often encountered repetitive, frustrating tasks and accepted them as part of the job. Gen Alpha will be more likely to ask why a machine, sensor, robot, camera, or piece of software isn’t doing what it's supposed to.
That attitude could accelerate the use of robotic fastening, automated cutting, machine-vision inspections, predictive maintenance, material tracking, and production scheduling. More importantly, these young workers may not assume automation requires a multimillion-dollar robotic production line.
They may see opportunities to automate one frustrating task at a time using affordable tools, small collaborative robots, sensors, cameras, and software. For smaller offsite factories that cannot afford a complete technological overhaul, that practical approach could be more valuable than purchasing an enormous system that management and production workers struggle to use.
They Will Expect Immediate Information
Gen Alpha has grown up with screens that provide instant feedback. They are accustomed to knowing whether something worked, how they performed, what comes next, and where they stand compared with a goal.
Inside a factory, they may expect to see production targets, current progress, quality issues, missing materials, and schedule changes in real time. They may not understand why information is kept confidential in an office, written on a clipboard, entered into several systems, or passed verbally from one supervisor to another.
Their expectations could force offsite companies to become more transparent internally. That may be uncomfortable for some managers, but better information generally produces better decisions. A worker who can immediately see that a material shortage will stop production tomorrow has a better chance of helping prevent it.
Documentation Will Come Naturally
Taking photographs and videos is already part of everyday life for this generation. Offsite construction could turn that instinct into one of its strongest quality-control tools.
Gen Alpha workers may routinely document concealed plumbing, wiring, insulation, fasteners, structural connections, and completed inspections before the next stage of construction covers them. Every module could eventually leave the factory with a digital history showing how it was built, who inspected it, what problems were discovered, and how they were corrected.
They could also help preserve something the industry risks losing: the practical knowledge of experienced employees. A 30-year factory veteran may know dozens of techniques that have never been written down. A young employee with a phone, camera, and an instinct for creating instructional content could help turn that knowledge into a permanent factory training library.
The Physical and Digital Worlds Will Be Connected
Gen Alpha may be unusually comfortable designing something on a screen, watching a machine produce the components, assembling those components in the factory, and checking the finished work against the original digital model.
That is exactly where offsite construction needs to go. Design, estimating, purchasing, production, quality control, transportation, setting, and jobsite completion should not operate as separate activities. They are connected parts of one system, even though many companies still manage them as individual departments that rarely share information efficiently.
The next generation may recognize those connections instinctively. They will see little reason why a design change should not automatically update the material list, production instructions, cost estimate, and delivery schedule.
“We’ve Always Done It This Way” Won’t Satisfy Them
This may become Gen Alpha’s most valuable—and occasionally most irritating—contribution to the industry. They are unlikely to be impressed by tradition when no one can explain why it still makes sense.
They may question why information is entered three times, why production drawings do not match purchasing records, why supervisors spend hours completing paperwork, why trailers sit unused in factory yards, or why production workers discover design mistakes only after construction begins.
Their questions will not always be correct, and they may not initially understand the legitimate reasons behind an established process. However, their willingness to question it could expose enormous amounts of waste that the industry has learned to tolerate.
Sustainability Will Be Expected
Gen Alpha is growing up with energy efficiency, climate concerns, recycling, material conservation, and environmental responsibility discussed as everyday realities. They may see factory waste, unnecessary transportation, discarded materials, and poorly performing buildings as failures rather than unavoidable costs.
That outlook should fit naturally with offsite construction. Factory production enables control of material use, waste reduction, improved building performance, and documentation of energy efficiency. The industry already has many of the sustainability advantages Gen Alpha will value, but we have not always done a good job explaining them.
If we want this generation to consider careers in offsite construction, we should show them that they can build real homes, solve housing problems, reduce waste, improve energy performance, and have a measurable impact on their communities.
My Grandson Dean Is Giving Me a Preview
I have been watching my grandson Dean grow into a very talented, hands-on, and eager-to-learn member of Gen Alpha. At 15, he is already a lifeguard, is learning welding, and is interested in becoming a mechanical engineer. He is comfortable learning by doing, but he is just as comfortable searching for information, watching how something works, and finding a better way to accomplish it.
What impresses me is the combination. Dean is not interested only in screens, and he is not afraid of physical work. He wants to understand how things are designed, how they fit together, and how they can be improved. If he represents even part of what Gen Alpha will bring into the workplace, offsite construction has an extraordinary opportunity waiting just ahead.
We Should Start Reaching Them Now
The offsite construction industry should not wait until Gen Alpha graduates and begins answering job advertisements. By then, technology companies, advanced manufacturers, engineering firms, energy companies, and other industries will already be competing for them.
Factories, associations, suppliers, and builders should begin forming relationships with middle schools, high schools, career and technical education centers, community colleges, robotics teams, SkillsUSA chapters, welding programs, and STEM educators. Factory tours should become interactive experiences where students can operate a design program, see robotic equipment, follow a module through production, and understand how hundreds of parts come together to form a finished home.
Companies could offer summer jobs, job shadowing, internships, design challenges, scholarships, and mentoring programs. Experienced factory employees could visit classrooms to demonstrate the connections among welding, carpentry, engineering, automation, transportation, and housing.
Most importantly, we must stop presenting offsite construction as simply another place to swing a hammer. Gen Alpha needs to see the complete picture: advanced manufacturing, artificial intelligence, robotics, design, engineering, skilled trades, sustainability, logistics, entrepreneurship, and the opportunity to help solve America’s housing shortage.
They Will Still Need What We Know
Digital fluency does not automatically produce a skilled craftsperson, engineer, supervisor, or factory manager. Gen Alpha will still need experienced people to teach them craftsmanship, structural consequences, building codes, material behavior, workplace safety, and the patience to solve problems without instant digital answers.
They will also need to learn when the software is wrong. A digital model may say everything fits, while an experienced production worker knows the connection cannot be assembled, transported, or installed safely in the real world.
The greatest opportunity is not replacing experienced employees with younger ones. It is pairing Gen Alpha’s instincts with the practical judgment of the people already working in our factories. The young employee may know how to find and analyze information instantly, while the veteran knows whether the solution will survive a 600-mile trip and a difficult crane set.
Gary’s Observation
Every generation believes the one coming behind it needs to slow down, listen more, and learn how the real world works. There is probably some truth in that. However, the current offsite construction industry also needs to listen to what Gen Alpha will be asking us.
They may not enter our factories wanting to replace experienced workers. They may enter wondering why so much of those workers’ knowledge, craftsmanship, and problem-solving ability was never captured, shared, or incorporated into the company’s systems.
Watching Dean grow up has convinced me that the future may not be a choice between technology and hands-on ability. His generation could be equally comfortable with both. If offsite construction begins reaching out now, we may attract young people who can weld the connection, understand the engineering behind it, document the work digitally, and then ask whether there is an even better way to do it.
That is not a generation our industry should wait for. It is one we should begin inviting in today.




















