World Construction Network‘s new digital magazine has been created to examine the forces now shaping construction markets worldwide, from investment shifts and procurement changes to supply chain pressure, labour availability and the growing role of technology in project delivery.

Its first edition opens with a feature on the global data centre boom, as the rapid expansion of AI drives demand for a new generation of hyperscale facilities. These projects require far greater power, cooling capacity and supporting infrastructure than many earlier data centres, creating pressure on grids, land availability and project timelines. Abi Millar investigates the build-out and the constraints now emerging around it.

Discover B2B Marketing That Performs

Combine business intelligence and editorial excellence to reach engaged professionals across 36 leading media platforms.

Find out more

Ukraine’s reconstruction effort is another major focus. Greg Noone reports on how builders are repairing damaged infrastructure during wartime, from bridges in Hostomel to other essential works, while also dealing with rising costs, labour shortages and corruption risks. The feature looks at the immediate challenge of keeping reconstruction moving and the uncertainty around a potential post-war construction surge.

The launch issue also covers the electrification of construction equipment. As demand grows for lower-emission machinery, OEMs and rental firms are expanding their product ranges and preparing fleets for a changing market. Chris Lewis examines how quickly electric equipment is moving from niche option to practical consideration across the sector.

Mining construction is treated as part of the same wider shift. Liam Critchley looks at how lower-carbon mining operations are changing the construction phase itself, with electrified fleets, brownfield redevelopment and automated processing plants altering requirements for power infrastructure, underground safety, plant design and project delivery.

Across the edition, World Construction Network sets out to connect individual projects and sector developments with the wider economic, technological and geopolitical pressures behind them. The aim is a clearer view of where construction investment is moving, which projects are advancing and where new opportunities are beginning to take shape, with direct industry intelligence from GlobalData’s Construction Intelligence Centre.

Read the launch edition now.