Construction

Construction progress drone work needs a system, not a folder of dates

Aerosyne keeps recurring site flights, volumetrics, and stakeholder reporting tied to the project that requested them — so months of progress data are queryable, not buried.

Aerial view of an active large-scale construction site — representative project for drone progress documentation and volumetric tracking
Photo:GMTO CorporationCC BY-SA 4.0
Workflow fit

Where construction drone work breaks down

Most failure isn't in the flight. It's in the recurring cadence, the deliverable handoff, and the project context that quietly disappears between visits.

  1. Recurring site flights tied to the project

    Each flight is linked to the project, the contractor, and the prior visit — so progress sequences are reconstructable months later instead of being a folder of timestamps.

  2. Volumetric and stockpile work as a repeatable job

    Stockpile measurement, cut-fill, and progress comparisons run as standardised jobs rather than ad hoc analysis a single operator has to remember.

  3. Stakeholder reporting in shape, every cycle

    Owners, GCs, and lenders expect a consistent reporting cadence. Aerosyne keeps the deliverable workflow tied to the same operational record that produced the imagery.

Program coverage

Construction drone programs Aerosyne supports

From vertical builds to civil sites and owner reporting, the same record carries through every cycle.

Vertical construction progress

Recurring overhead and oblique sweeps for vertical construction with crew, aircraft, and weather context preserved on the record.

Civil and earthworks

Civil sites benefit from repeatable volumetric runs and site-wide orthos scheduled against project milestones rather than calendar guesses.

Owner and lender reporting

Branded, predictable client deliverables drawn from the same operational record — no rebuilding the report each month.