In the construction industry, AI (artificial intelligence) has become the centerpiece of nearly every technology conversation today. However, amid all the excitement surrounding AI’s capabilities, we are sometimes overlooking a more fundamental issue. The future of AI will not be determined by technology alone. It will be determined by trust.
Recently, I caught up with Bryan Reimer, research scientist at MIT’s Center for Transportation and Logistics, on The Peggy Smedley Show. Our conversation explored many of the challenges surrounding AI, from governance and workforce disruption to safety and accountability. What struck me most was not a discussion about what AI can do, but rather what society must do to ensure AI delivers lasting value.
For years, the technology industry has measured success through speed, efficiency, and automation. If a process could be completed faster, cheaper, or at greater scale, it was often considered progress.
AI is forcing us to rethink that equation. Productivity matters. Innovation matters. Economic growth matters. But productivity alone is not the same as progress. As AI becomes embedded in transportation systems, construction, homes, commercial buildings, cities, and critical infrastructure, the questions become far more complex than simply asking whether the technology works. We must ask whether people trust it.
Trust has always been the foundation of successful technological adoption. For example, people trust public infrastructure because standards exist to ensure safety, reliability, and transparency. Technology does not earn trust because it is innovative. Technology earns trust because people believe it is being developed and deployed responsibly. That is where AI faces its greatest challenge.
The race to innovate has moved faster than the conversations surrounding governance, accountability, and societal impact. Organizations are deploying AI tools at remarkable speed, but many are still trying to determine how these systems should be evaluated, monitored, and managed over time.
This is particularly important because AI is no longer confined to experimentation. As a result, trust must become a strategic priority. Construction companies deploying AI should be asking several critical questions:
- Who is accountable when a system fails?
- How do we identify unintended consequences?
- What safeguards exist to protect the public?
- How do we maintain transparency while encouraging innovation?
- How do we ensure human judgment remains part of the process where it matters most?
The reality is every transformative technology creates both opportunities and risks. AI is no exception. It has the potential to improve productivity, accelerate research, enhance decisionmaking, and create entirely new economic opportunities. At the same time, it raises legitimate concerns about workforce transitions, misinformation, cybersecurity, privacy, and accountability.

Ignoring those concerns will not make them disappear. Addressing them openly is how trust is built. This is why the future of AI will ultimately depend on whether organizations, policymakers, and technology leaders can strike the right balance between innovation and responsibility.
The goal should be to ensure progress serves a purpose. As I have often written throughout my career, technology should help us solve problems, create opportunities, and build a better future. AI has the potential to do all those things. But realizing that potential requires more than powerful algorithms and larger models. It requires transparency, accountability, and governance that can evolve alongside the technology. Most importantly, it requires access to good data and trust.
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