nima pleased to support DCW 2025
nima is pleased to be again supporting Digital Construction Week (DCW), back at Excel London on 4-5 June 2025 for a special 10th anniversary edition.
The free-to attend expo event features two days of inspiring content. Including 350+ speakers across 10 stages, 120 hours of CPD-accredited education, 150+ exhibitors, live demos, workshops, and networking drinks.
Event director Karolina Orecchini says:
“This special anniversary event will offer even greater opportunities for the industry to network, collaborate, and drive innovation. Since its launch in 2015, DCW has become the go-to event to explore new technologies that are shaping the future and improving results across the built environment.”
DCW is a one-stop shop for visitors to learn how to use new technology to improve projects, assets, teams and business directly from the companies driving the sector forward. The disruptive technologies and solutions set to be on display include digital twins, augmented reality, information management, automation and AI, drones, and robotics. Visitors will discover how these solutions can help them be more efficient, collaborative, connected, sustainable and profitable.
Industry partnership
The event also boasts 10 theatres of free-to-attend talks, informative panel discussions, interactive workshops and more. As an industry partner, Nima has been supporting DCW in curating the Information Management Stage and the Information Management Exchange. Hear from industry experts and get up to speed on the latest IM ideas shaping architecture and design, engineering and operations.
Registration for DCW 2025 is open (click on the DCW banner below); the full speaker programme will be announced shortly.
Emma Hooper, head of information management strategy at RLB Digital, and vice chair of nima and buildingSMART UK&I, said:
“Compared to other events I have attended in 2024, it was by far the best. If we could bottle up the passion, innovation and magic in the room and spread it to the rest of the industry we could actually change for the better.”
