UPDATED Apr 24, 2026
Weather is the single most common cause of non-compensable schedule delays in construction. Unlike supply chain shortages or labor disputes, weather events are treated as force majeure in most contracts. This creates a gray area where neither party absorbs the cost cleanly, and disputes over delay claims become time-consuming.
Some project teams account for weather using historical averages and flat calendar-based allowances. This treats weather risk as a static input rather than a variable that compounds across interdependent activities. The result is a schedule that absorbs minor disruptions but breaks down under sustained or repeated weather events. Construction technology now gives project teams a way to move from reactive delay management to
proactive weather planning.
This guide covers:
Where Weather Hits the Schedule Hardest
How Does Construction Technology Improve Weather-Related Decision-Making?
Connecting Weather Data to Cost Management
Evaluating Technology Platforms for Weather-Resilient Project Delivery
Common Questions About Managing Weather Delays With Construction Technology
Where Weather Meets the Single Database Platform
Complete the form to download the eBook: From Forecast to Field: Leveraging Construction Technology to Minimize Weather-Related Delays.
