procore acquires datagrid

Procore acquires Datagrid

7 0

Deal will push agentic AI deeper into construction workflows


Procore has acquired Datagrid, a vertical AI platform focused on data connectivity and autonomous workflow execution, in a move that signals an assertive phase in its long-term AI strategy.

Financial terms were not disclosed, but the deal positions Procore to move beyond embedded “assistive AI” features and toward something closer to an agentic, cross-platform intelligence layer for construction.

Datagrid is not a generative chatbot in the conventional sense. Its core value lies in connecting fragmented data sources, such as ERP systems, cloud storage, document repositories, project platforms and applying AI reasoning to orchestrate actions across them.

In practical terms, this means automating multi-step processes such as submittal reviews, RFI drafting, document classification and cross-system search, rather than simply summarising text or answering questions.

Procore says the acquisition will accelerate its ability to “eliminate data silos” and automate complex workflows, a familiar ambition in an industry still dominated by point solutions and disconnected platforms.

More notably, Datagrid’s technology is designed to work across third-party systems, not just within a single vendor stack. That matters in construction, where most firms operate a patchwork of ERP, accounting, document management and field tools alongside their primary project platform.

Supported by
AI content is independently produced by the AEC Magazine editorial team. HP and NVIDIA supports the creation of this content, but all opinions and coverage remain editorially independent.

From a strategic perspective, this gives Procore an edge in the industry, as there are not that many credible, vendor-agnostic data connectivity and reasoning layers.

While Procore has steadily added AI features, particularly around document management, search and insights, these have largely been bounded by its own data model. Datagrid’s “deep search” and orchestration engine is explicitly built to span multiple systems, which aligns with Procore’s stated ambition to turn fragmented data into a “system of intelligence”.


Discover what’s new in technology for architecture, engineering and construction — read the latest edition of AEC Magazine

👉 Subscribe FREE here


Steve Davis, Procore’s President of Product & Technology, framed the deal as enabling customers to “bridge the gaps between siloed data and initiate actions across their entire ecosystem”. This is less about prettier dashboards or faster RFI summaries, and more about automating the connective tissue between tools that already exist, something construction software has promised for decades but rarely delivered at scale.

Datagrid will continue to be offered to both Procore and non-Procore customers, which suggests Procore is at least initially treating it as a horizontal AI service layer rather than a purely proprietary feature. That decision will be closely watched. If Procore keeps Datagrid relatively open, it could position itself as an AI broker across the wider construction tech stack. If it eventually pulls the technology tightly into its own platform, it risks reinforcing the same vendor-centric data gravity that has limited interoperability elsewhere in the sector.

The appointment of Datagrid CEO Thiago da Costa to lead AI and data strategy at Procore is also significant. da Costa has been a seriel entrepreneur and has sold companies/ technologies to the likes of Autodesk before. Datagrid’s philosophyis to create an AI that can execute, not just talk” and is closer to the emerging agentic AI trend than to the copilots currently being rolled out by most AEC software vendors. If Procore follows through on that vision, customers could see systems that don’t just surface insights but actually trigger workflows, move data between platforms and close procedural loops with minimal human intervention.

Still, as a strategic move, the Datagrid deal is one of Procore’s more interesting bets in recent years: less about bolting on features, and more about re-architecting how construction data is connected, reasoned over and acted upon. If it works, it could shift Procore from being a system of record toward something closer to a system of intelligence. That would be a materially different proposition for the industry.

Advertisement

Leave a comment