The integrated campus accelerates DPR’s prefabrication strategy, boosting productivity and delivering higher‑quality, faster construction for technology customers. It reflects a broader industry move toward off‑site, tech‑driven building methods in congested, high‑cost markets.
DPR Construction unveiled a 113,702‑square‑foot flagship campus in Santa Clara, the first U.S. headquarters to house its administrative, craft and prefabrication teams under one roof. The 68,160‑sq‑ft office wing sits beside a 45,542‑sq‑ft Prefabrication Assembly Facility, allowing designers, project managers and tradespeople to share the same campus. By centralising operations in the heart of Silicon Valley, DPR shortens internal commute times, reduces the traffic burden typical of the Bay Area, and creates a single point of control for safety and quality standards.
The new lab is a concrete expression of DPR’s long‑term commitment to off‑site construction. Equipped with virtual design and construction (VDC) tools, the facility can pre‑assemble drywall, finish carpentry, architectural concrete and building‑envelope systems in a climate‑controlled environment, eliminating weather‑related interruptions. This approach builds on the company’s 2021 research center in North Carolina and its data‑center projects in Texas, where prefabricated electrical rooms and mechanical racks have already cut field labor and schedule risk. The repeatable, data‑driven workflow delivers higher quality components and more predictable hand‑offs to the job site.
For the broader construction market, DPR’s integrated campus signals a shift toward modular, technology‑enabled delivery models in high‑cost, congested regions. By blurring the traditional office‑craft divide, the firm fosters real‑time collaboration that can accelerate decision‑making and reduce rework. The model also addresses labor shortages, as skilled tradespeople gain access to modern, safe workspaces away from noisy sites. As developers and owners increasingly demand faster timelines and lower carbon footprints, prefabrication hubs like DPR’s are likely to become a competitive differentiator, prompting rivals to invest in similar capabilities.
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