Construction projects involve dozens of moving parts — subcontractors, timelines, client expectations, and site conditions that change daily. Keeping everyone informed and accountable is one of the biggest challenges general contractors and custom home builders face.
Drone progress documentation solves this problem by giving you a consistent, timestamped visual record of your project at every stage. Instead of relying on scattered photos taken from ground level, you get high-resolution aerial images and video that capture the full scope of the site.
Why Aerial Documentation Works Better
Ground-level photos tell part of the story. Aerial documentation tells the whole story. From above, you can see the relationship between different parts of the site, track earthwork progress across the entire footprint, and document conditions that would be difficult or impossible to capture from the ground.
Reducing Unnecessary Site Visits
One of the most practical benefits of drone documentation is reducing the number of site visits required for project oversight. When stakeholders, lenders, or clients can log into a private portal and see current aerial photos and video, they don't need to drive to the site for every update. This saves time, reduces disruption to the construction crew, and keeps the project moving.
Building a Visual Record for Accountability
Disputes happen in construction. Having a timestamped aerial record of site conditions at every phase gives you documentation that can resolve questions about what was done, when it was done, and what conditions existed at any given point in the project.
Getting Started
Remington Drones works with contractors along Utah's Wasatch Front to set up documentation schedules that fit their project timeline. Whether you need weekly captures, milestone-based documentation, or a one-time project scan, we'll build a plan that works for your project.