
Frost Radar™: Sustainable Construction Materials, 2025
Description
Regulations and public demand to address environmental impacts are compelling construction companies to adopt sustainable practices that reduce emissions and enhance energy efficiency in buildings. Climate change-related extreme weather events serve as a stark reminder of the urgent need for comprehensive action. From a manufacturer’s perspective, decisions made during the design phase of construction projects can significantly influence a material's life cycle, often hindering end-of-life advantages and complicating the shift from linear to circular models.
Innovative digital solutions are emerging to tackle these challenges by integrating artificial intelligence, digital twins, material passports, and other technologies into supply chains. The “buildings as material banks” concept advocates for new business models focused on alternative material sourcing, leasing, repair economies, and reuse strategies.
Still, the construction industry has been slow in adopting new technologies, most likely because construction site workforces, which are beyond vendor control, are used to doing their trades in a certain way. Trends mostly develop at a regional or local level, driven by building codes, government funding, thermal efficiency regulation, home loans, or specific disaster recovery actions.
Frost & Sullivan analyzes numerous companies in an industry. Those selected for further analysis based on their leadership or other distinctions are benchmarked across 10 Growth and Innovation criteria to reveal their position on the Frost Radar™. The publication presents competitive profiles of each company on the Frost Radar™ considering their strengths and the opportunities that best fit those strengths.
Innovative digital solutions are emerging to tackle these challenges by integrating artificial intelligence, digital twins, material passports, and other technologies into supply chains. The “buildings as material banks” concept advocates for new business models focused on alternative material sourcing, leasing, repair economies, and reuse strategies.
Still, the construction industry has been slow in adopting new technologies, most likely because construction site workforces, which are beyond vendor control, are used to doing their trades in a certain way. Trends mostly develop at a regional or local level, driven by building codes, government funding, thermal efficiency regulation, home loans, or specific disaster recovery actions.
Frost & Sullivan analyzes numerous companies in an industry. Those selected for further analysis based on their leadership or other distinctions are benchmarked across 10 Growth and Innovation criteria to reveal their position on the Frost Radar™. The publication presents competitive profiles of each company on the Frost Radar™ considering their strengths and the opportunities that best fit those strengths.
Table of Contents
- Strategic Imperative
- Growth Environment
- Frost RadarTM Competitive Environment
- AGC
- Arkema
- BASF
- Covestro
- CRH
- Dow
- DuPont
- Heidelberg Materials
- Henkel
- Holcim
- Mapei
- Mohawk Industries
- NSG
- Owens Corning
- Saint-Gobain
- Shaw
- Shin-Etsu Chemical
- Sika
- SOPREMA
- Westlake
- Best Practices
- Growth Opportunities
- Frost RadarTM: Benchmarking Future Growth Potential 2 Major Indices, 10 Analytical Ingredients, 1 Platform
- Significance of Being on the Frost RadarTM
- Frost RadarTM Empowers the CEO’s Growth Team
- Frost RadarTM Empowers Investors
- Frost RadarTM Empowers Customers
- Frost RadarTM Empowers the Board of Directors
- Next Steps
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