
Australia’s construction sector, especially in New South Wales, continues to lag in productivity, with over 70% of documentation still submitted as PDFs and minimal digital training. The industry’s reliance on analogue processes drives cost overruns, delays, and fragmented supply chains, while digital tools such as BIM, digital twins, and AI analytics promise substantial gains. Government reforms have introduced digital‑focused legislation, yet they fall short of providing scalable support for the 95% of firms that are micro‑ or small‑to‑medium enterprises. To bridge the gap, the DigiCon Policy Directions Framework recommends a national coordinating body, mandatory open standards, and embedding digital deliverables in contracts.
The construction industry remains one of Australia’s most under‑digitalised sectors, despite contributing up to 10 percent of NSW’s GDP. Legacy workflows—PDF‑heavy documentation, fragmented supply chains, and scarce IT support—have entrenched inefficiencies that cost firms time and money. Recent data show that only a handful of firms invest in R&D, while the majority of SMEs lack the resources to adopt modern tools, creating a productivity chasm that threatens the affordability of new infrastructure and the sector’s sustainability.
Policy responses have begun to surface, from the Design and Building Practitioners Act 2020 to the NSW Innovation Blueprint 2035, yet these initiatives often focus on regulatory compliance rather than performance uplift. Gaps persist in standardisation, training, and incentives, especially for smaller contractors. The DigiCon Policy Directions Framework, developed by Western Sydney University, addresses these shortcomings by proposing a coordinated national body, mandatory open BIM standards, and the integration of digital deliverables into procurement contracts. By aligning governance, standards, and workforce development, the framework aims to create a cohesive digital ecosystem that can scale across the entire construction value chain.
If embraced, digitalisation could deliver a 10‑15 percent productivity boost, reduce information‑search time by up to 18 percent, and enable real‑time analytics for better decision‑making. Embedding digital twins and AI‑driven insights throughout an asset’s lifecycle promises not only cost savings but also improved sustainability outcomes. For industry leaders, investors, and policymakers, the message is clear: coordinated digital transformation is no longer optional—it is essential for maintaining competitiveness, controlling cost inflation, and meeting the growing demand for resilient, smart infrastructure.
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