
In the construction market, situations are increasingly frequent in which technical issues appear before the warranty period expires. We are not referring to major defects, but to premature wear: finishes that deteriorate, installations that require intervention, details that fail to withstand over time.
This phenomenon is not accidental. It is the result of continuous cost optimization.
In an environment where price pressure is high and deadlines are compressed, materials and execution are calibrated for immediate efficiency, not for extended durability. The difference between “compliant” and “resilient” becomes essential.
The building is delivered correctly from a technical standpoint. But the margin of resilience is minimal.
For the buyer, the perception of newness creates an implicit expectation of reliability. In reality, durability is no longer guaranteed by age, but by the standards applied in execution.
This shift redefines the relationship with the real estate product. We are no longer purchasing just a construction, but a system that requires monitoring and maintenance from the very first years.
In a market focused on rapid delivery, the real difference is not made by who builds faster, but by who builds to last.
(Photo: Freepik)