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Home Energy Efficiency

The future of engineering

by Katie Livingston
August 12, 2025
in Energy Efficiency, News, Policy, Projects, Renewable Energy, Spotlight, Sustainability
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Image: Grand Warszawski/stock.adobe.com

Image: Grand Warszawski/stock.adobe.com

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Engineering is evolving fast – and the future belongs to those who adapt.  

2023 Engineers Australia Professional Engineer of the Year, Adam Jones. Image: EA

CLT Toolbox CEO and 2023 Engineers Australia Professional Engineer of the Year, Adam Jones, has been leading the leading the field with his groundbreaking work to simplifying mass timber design and help engineers build faster, cleaner, and smarter. 

Here, he shared his five hot takes from on where the industry is headed and how engineers can stay ahead.

1. Manufactured products will redefine design

Prefabricated buildings are one of the clearest paths to cutting costs and decarbonising construction. Manufactured products are the building blocks of this future. They are repeatable, catalogued, and designed for the factory floor. These products benefit directly from AI, digitisation and advanced modelling, making the process smarter and faster. 

2. Performance-based design is the new standard

Technology is moving faster than our codes and education systems can keep up. If we want to design the next generation of buildings that are more affordable and lower in carbon, engineers need to become comfortable with performance-based design. It’s not about ticking off prescriptive rules. It’s about proving outcomes and applying good judgment. 

3. Curiosity is a must-have mindset

Curious engineers explore unfamiliar products like timber, bamboo, or green concrete. They try new tools and ask questions others don’t. In a world of rapid change, curiosity will be the trait that keeps engineers relevant and in demand.  

4. Multi-disciplinary awareness is the new edge

Engineering used to be about staying in your technical lane. But with the rise of manufactured products and system-based design, structural engineers for example, need to understand how their work interacts with fire, acoustics, sustainability, and more.

5. Designs will become products

More of construction will be built around reusable systems and component libraries. This is the future of scalable and cost-effective design. Engineers will be part of shaping flat-pack style systems and component-based approaches that improve over time. It’s not the end of creativity. It’s just a new way to scale good engineering and deliver consistent results. 

Join Engineers Australia by 31 August and save $105. Be part of Australia’s engineering future. Visit engaus.org/getsaving to learn more.

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