The Bit Build Forge does not integrate by merging. It integrates by giving disconnected work a shared field of structural standing.
Every complex build has an integration problem.
Not the technical kind — the information kind. Owner goals, designer intent, contractor execution, peer reviewer findings, commissioning results, RFI responses, punch items, closeout requirements. Each one produced by a different party, in a different format, at a different moment in the project. Each one sitting in its own document, its own folder, its own system.
The standard solution is to connect them. Build a dashboard. Link the documents. Create a shared drive. Run a coordination meeting. These efforts produce process visibility. What they rarely produce is structural clarity — an answer to the question: what does this piece of information actually mean, and where does it belong in the build?
The Bit Build Forge takes a different approach.
Not merging. Standing.
Most integration projects ask: can this tool talk to that tool? Can this database feed that dashboard? Can this document be linked to that workflow?
That produces brittle integration. The relationship is built between systems that were not designed to share meaning. When one changes, the connection breaks. When the project closes, the integration disappears.
The Forge asks a different question: what structural standing does each piece of work have?
Standing means: what layer does it belong to? What role does it play? What evidence supports it? What closes it? What witnesses it?
Once each piece of work has structural standing, integration follows naturally. Identity is declared. Role is declared. State is visible. Gaps are named. Relationships become comparable across roles and phases — not because everything is in one system, but because everything is in the same field.
What changes when review becomes field formation
A peer reviewer reads documents, compares drawings, inspects field conditions, remembers past problems, detects mismatches, and decides what matters. That is structural work. Most of it is tacit — held in the expert's head, expressed through judgment, lost when the project ends.
The Forge makes that work explicit.
A review comment becomes a coordination-risk Bit. A submittal decision becomes a product Bit validated against design intent. A site observation becomes a field-reality evidence Bit. A commissioning test becomes a performance-witness Bit. A punch item becomes a defect-resolution Bit, open until closed.
The activity has not changed. What changes is that the output has structural standing. It can be located. It can be acted on. It can be witnessed. It persists beyond the meeting where it was generated.
Review is no longer only a document activity. It becomes field formation.
The expertise claim
Human experts already do this mentally. They build a structural field in their heads over the course of a project — who said what, what was resolved, what is still open, what the owner actually cares about versus what the drawings say.
The Forge makes that field explicit and inspectable.
It turns tacit knowledge into declared Bits. It turns scattered review comments into field structure. It turns project memory into reusable patterns. It turns one-off expertise into structural standing that can be reviewed, transferred, and built upon.
That is why processing documents matters. The goal is not document summarization. The goal is to develop the field that holds the build together.
Without the Forge: information is scattered, status is interpreted manually, responsibility is diffuse, evidence arrives late, review repeats itself, project memory is weak.
With the Forge: each Bit has identity, each Bit has state, each Bit has evidence requirements, each Bit has closure conditions. Gaps are visible. Work is comparable across roles and phases.
That is not more process. It is less ambiguity.
The Bit Build Forge does not replace expertise. It captures and compounds it. It does not erase the differences between disconnected efforts. It makes those differences structurally useful.
They manage the build with documents. The Forge makes the build structurally visible, actionable, and provable.
— Dave / greenm3