
Why Faster Construction Demands Faster Approvals. Every planning director knows the scene: a stack of site plan submittals, understaffed departments, and developers calling about projects in review for weeks. Meanwhile, construction technology is accelerating faster than anyone predicted.
Every planning director knows the scene: a stack of site plan submittals on Monday, three staff members out, and a developer calling about a project that's been "in review" for eleven weeks. The drawings get passed from planning to engineering to fire, each department checking for setback violations, parking calculations, stormwater compliance, ADA accessibility, fire apparatus access. Notes get scribbled. PDFs get emailed. Items get missed.
Meanwhile, construction technology is accelerating faster than anyone predicted. Modular buildings ship fully assembled. Robotic systems pour foundations in hours. China is experimenting with 3D-printing structures from lunar soil for future moon bases (Jones, 2025). AI is transforming how buildings get designed—generating thousands of code-compliant configurations overnight.
But here's the disconnect: when the building industry speeds up and approvals don't, the entire system stalls. Developers sit idle. Housing backlogs grow. Planning staff burn out under mounting pressure they didn't create.
This isn't a future problem. It's happening now.
According to the National Association of Home Builders, regulatory requirements add an average of $93,870 to the price of a new single-family home—with approval timelines being a significant driver (NAHB, 2021). A 2024 survey of municipal planning departments found that 67% reported being understaffed relative to submittal volume.
The pain is real on both sides:
For Cities: Understaffed departments face mounting backlogs. Inconsistent reviews across staff create liability exposure. Experienced planners spend hours on routine compliance checks instead of the nuanced judgment calls that actually require their expertise. Burnout drives turnover, which makes the backlog worse.
For Developers and Design Firms: Weeks assembling drawings. Months in review cycles. Endless back-and-forth over items that could have been flagged on day one. Projects stall not because of design complexity, but because of process friction. Every week of delay carries real cost.
What if routine compliance checks—setback requirements, parking ratios, landscaping calculations, fire access dimensions—could be flagged instantly, before a project ever lands on a reviewer's desk?
That's the shift AI makes possible. Not replacing human judgment, but redirecting it.
Here's how it works in practice:
This isn't about cutting staff. Planning departments don't have enough reviewers as it is. It's about giving existing staff leverage—catching the obvious errors early so experienced planners can focus on the judgment calls that actually matter.
For developers and design firms, the multiplier effect is significant. Fewer revision cycles. Issues caught before submittal, not after. The same team handles more projects without ballooning overhead.
We're not promising permits in 24 hours—public notice requirements, interdepartmental routing, and state-mandated review periods exist for good reasons. But compressing a six-week review into six days? That's realistic.
From weeks to days. From bottleneck to launchpad.
The result isn't just speed. It's consistency. It's audit trails that protect staff decisions. It's applicants who understand exactly why something was flagged, with specific code references they can address.
Housing undersupply is a crisis in most American metros. The National Low Income Housing Coalition estimates a shortage of 7.3 million affordable rental homes nationwide (NLIHC, 2024). Cities face pressure to approve more housing, faster—but without the staff to handle increased volume and without sacrificing the life-safety reviews that protect communities.
AI-assisted review isn't a silver bullet. But it's a tool that lets cities do more with what they have, while maintaining (and often improving) the quality and defensibility of their decisions.
For developers and design consultancies, it means predictability. Knowing that compliance issues get caught early. Spending less time waiting and more time building.
AutoSitu is currently piloting with municipal planning departments and design consultancies in California and Michigan, with broader rollout planned for 2026. We're building for both sides of the review process—because faster approvals require tools that work for cities and applicants alike.
The future of construction is faster. The future of compliance can keep pace.
References:
Jones, A. (2025, March 26). China to 3D-print bricks on the moon using lunar dirt in 2028. Space.com. https://www.space.com/space-exploration/human-spaceflight/china-to-3d-print-bricks-on-the-moon-using-lunar-dirt-in-2028
National Association of Home Builders. (2021). Government regulation in the price of a new home. NAHB. https://www.nahb.org/news-and-economics/housing-economics/national-statistics/government-regulation-in-the-price-of-a-new-home
National Low Income Housing Coalition. (2024). The gap: A shortage of affordable homes. NLIHC. https://nlihc.org/gap