Skip to main content

Efficient construction management

Linarc says that it is offering a comprehensive, cloud-based construction project management software that can foster collaboration and efficiency for mid- to large- scale projects. The firm claims that its software can solve the daily challenges that owners, design teams, and contractors confront while driving projects to completion.
January 24, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
A new software system from Linarc is said to offer a comprehensive construction solution © Mikeaubry | Dreamstime.com

Linarc uses technology, integrated connectivity, intelligent data analysis, and real-time updates to give users the tools, resources, and information they need to perform at their best. As a result, projects run smoother; progress moves faster, and projects are completed on time and on budget, according to the company.

Linarc is a comprehensive project management solution that eliminates the need for multiple systems, with built-in features that provide everything a user needs to manage construction projects successfully in a single platform. In addition, Linarc is an open API and is said to integrate easily with standard project management solutions, ERPs, and other software for seamless accounting and transparency.

Linarc’s collaborative scheduling feature uses predictive analytics to allocate resources to individual tasks to eliminate delays and ensure on-time completion. It can link work crews, materials, and equipment to the schedule of values and updates progress in real-time.

The company says that project owners have clear insights into work progress and budget expenditures, while design teams are connected to project execution for problem-solving. Meanwhile, CFOs and procurement specialists have control of project financials. And management teams get detailed reports and reference dashboards to stay informed and on target. In addition, supervisors control work assignments and material deliveries for seamless workflows and sustainable progress, while field crews receive detailed work assignments with documents and photos.

Linarc can eliminate communication silos across a project portfolio, and the system’s analysis gives company leaders the leverage of combined resources across projects according to the firm.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Trimble continues to develop connected community portfolio
    April 9, 2013
    Trimble is demonstrating its sophisticated Connected Site portfolio for heavy civil contractors, which connects assets, information, people, machines and sites. This package can meet a vast array of workflow needs of different stakeholders within the contractor’s organisation and meets demand for greater efficiency, shorter completion times and higher quality. Trimble is demonstrating how its Connected Site solutions leverage real-time wireless data flow between the office and job site. This technology allo
  • Award-winning road and bridge design software
    March 20, 2012
    The integration of software tools, users and data was an important factor in a major highway project The giant High Five interchange in Texas, USA, emerged as a key winner in Bentley Systems' software awards this year. It won both the Innovation in Road and Bridge category and, significantly, Connecting Project Teams. The awards, a feature of the annual exhibition/conference organised by the software house, attract increasing interest from industry, and competition has become widespread, not least bec
  • Connected construction paves the way for next gen highways
    December 13, 2024
    Luc Le Maire, senior vice president EMEA at Topcon Positioning Systems explains how utilising connected construction technology will help to deliver the next gen, smart highways
  • Construction trends in North America, looking to the future
    June 10, 2019
    Exciting changes in construction will reward the aware contractor - *Jeff Winke comments Hop in a car and drive anywhere in the US and chances are the drive will be on roads and highways that need patching, resurfacing, or widening, and bridges often show signs of needed maintenance. Sadly, things are in bad shape. On the last two report cards from the American Society of Civil Engineers, the US infrastructure scored a D+. This year’s report urges the government and private sector to increase spending