What Legos Teach Us About Construction Projects


The inspiration for this post came straight from the backseat of my car.

We were driving through downtown when my 5-year-old son started pointing out the window, calling out every building that “looks like a Lego building.”

And he was right.

At just five years old, he’s already seeing the world like a builder — breaking complex structures down into smaller parts. That absolutely blew my mind. Legos are already teaching him so much about the industry I’ve devoted my life to.


1. Start with the Box Cover (the Vision)

Every Lego box shows the finished product on the front. That’s your renderings in construction. It’s the shared vision that keeps everyone aligned. You can’t build what you can’t see.


2. Follow the Instructions (Plans, Specs, and Schedule)

One of the first things I taught my son was to follow the directions. Miss a step, and the whole model gets thrown off. That’s no different than a jobsite — ignore a detail in the contract documents and you could end up with a triangle building instead of a square one.

Now he builds 8+ age Lego sets on his own — and reads the instructions by himself.

Imagine trying to build the Millennium Falcon from a pile of loose bricks without instructions. Even seasoned pros would struggle. That’s why plans matter.


3. Sort the Pieces First (Preconstruction Planning)

Before my son starts building, he dumps out the bags and organizes the pieces. It’s a habit that mirrors preconstruction: gather, plan, stage, and verify materials before the build begins. Smart habits start young.


4. Don’t Force the Wrong Fit (Coordination)

If a brick doesn’t click, it doesn’t belong there — simple as that. Same goes on a project. When trades try to force a solution, it usually means someone missed something upstream.


5. Every Piece Matters

Lego teaches that the smallest part matters. A single stud out of place ruins the whole model. In construction, missing details lead to rework, cost, or worse — risk. Everything connects.


There’s something special about watching your kid discover the magic of building — not just with their hands, but with their mind. And to know he’s seeing connections that took me decades to fully understand? That’s humbling.

He’s definitely going to be way smarter than me. But hey — if he builds a better building, I’ll take the win.


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