Episodes

  • #441 - Plugged In or Gassed Up: America's Energy Debate
    Jul 9 2026

    In this episode of the Construction Corner podcast, host Dillon dives into the rapidly shifting energy landscape — starting with a fresh FERC press release that brings new regulatory guidance on how data centers and large power users connect to the grid. From there, the conversation covers the growing consumer rejection of electric vehicles (outside of Tesla), why hybrid technology is winning, and the infrastructure challenges holding EVs back. Dillon also weighs in on the gas vs. electric appliance debate, California's push to mandate all-electric new construction, and whether that policy actually makes sense in a city like San Francisco where you barely need AC. The episode wraps with a look at where U.S. power actually comes from — natural gas, nuclear, coal, hydro — and why Dillon thinks the resilience of fossil fuel infrastructure gets unfairly overlooked in the rush to electrify everything.

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    12 mins
  • #440 - Big Firm vs. Small Firm: What Actually Matters for Your Career
    Jul 7 2026

    In this episode of the Construction Corner podcast, host Dillon sits down to discuss the big firm vs. small firm debate in engineering — breaking down what each type of company actually offers early-career professionals, how culture and company values shape your experience more than size alone, and why smaller firms often push you to do real work faster. Dillon also shares VS Engineering's ambitious goal of becoming a top 20 electrical engineering firm nationally, breaks down revenue numbers from the industry's biggest players, and talks about how they're building a flat, efficient org structure designed to serve electrical contractors at scale.

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    12 mins
  • #439 - Off the Grid in Oregon: How Living Without Power Shaped an Electrical Engineer
    Jul 2 2026

    In this episode, Dillon traces his path to electrical engineering back to an unusual origin: growing up off the grid on 38 acres in rural Oregon. He walks through the real-world mechanics of running a homestead on wind, solar, hydro, and propane — and why the math on green energy rarely pencils out without government subsidies. From windmill blades that shatter at 100 mph to abandoned turbine graveyards outside Palm Springs, he makes the case that most people advocating for renewable energy have never actually had to live with it. The conversation also touches on the surging demand for electrical engineers and electricians in the data center industry, the spotted owl controversy that gutted Pacific Northwest logging towns, and why CO2 limits don't make sense to someone who learned the carbon cycle in third grade.

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    9 mins
  • #438 - Almonds, Aqueducts, and Air Boards: Water West of Colorado
    Jun 30 2026

    In this episode, the host digs into a LinkedIn argument that got under his skin — people applying Midwest logic to Western water problems. He breaks down why water rights in the West are a completely different beast: from California's century-old water accords and LA's dependence on Lake Mead, to Oregon refusing to pull from the Columbia River while Idaho and Washington farm the same banks. He also tackles the data center water debate, explains why almonds are a valid water concern but hay isn't, and shares firsthand experience with the contradictory demands of California's air board and irrigation districts. If you've never had to think about water rights, this episode will change that.

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    9 mins
  • #437 - Your Personal Economy: Why the Headlines Don't Determine Your Success
    Jun 18 2026

    Dillon makes the case that the economy you should care most about isn't the one on the news — it's your own. Whether the market is up or down, your personal trajectory is determined by what you're doing, who you're selling to, how you're spending, and what you're building. He draws the parallel to personal fitness: the national obesity rate doesn't matter if you're putting in the work. Then he shifts into something a little different — the power of language. Drawing from a military memoir and a management consulting book, Dillon talks about how the words you choose, the names you give your teams, and the details you pay attention to signal everything about who you are and how you operate. Small things — a well-chosen phrase, a care package, trash you pick up in the parking lot — add up more than people realize.

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    9 mins
  • #436 - Workforce Development, Prefab & Leadership: What's Coming to the VDS Summit
    Jun 16 2026

    Dillon gives a preview of what's coming at the next Vertical Design Build Summit — speakers covering workforce development, prefab, design-build, and leadership — before diving into a candid conversation about what it really takes to build a career in the trades. He breaks down the reality behind the "make $300K as an electrician" headlines, what attracts and retains apprentices, and why glorifying the paycheck without explaining the grind does more harm than good. He also talks about career growth from the employer and employee side — how companies can create real learning opportunities, and how individuals can take ownership of their own development. Plus, a great story about a guy who went from painting parking lot stripes to CIO of a $150 billion company.

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    17 mins
  • #435 - The Grid, the GPUs and the Gap
    Jun 11 2026

    Dillon connects the dots between the aging power grid, the AI boom, and what it all means for construction. He traces the arc from EV adoption to data center explosion — and why today's power demands from AI infrastructure dwarf anything the grid has faced before. He also gets into the Anthropic-xAI compute deal, SpaceX's looming IPO, and the SaaS valuation collapse, before bringing it back to a grounded point: AI is a powerful tool, but it still can't replace the contextual knowledge, code expertise, and real-world judgment that construction professionals bring every day.

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    18 mins
  • #434  - Advanced BIM, Automation, AI, and the Future of Construction
    Jun 9 2026

    Recorded live at the Vertical Design Build Summit 2025, Dillon Mitchell delivers a presentation on AI, BIM automation, and the future of construction. He shares how his firm built automation tools that can place thousands of devices in a 320,000 sq ft building in minutes instead of months, why the labor shortage means technology adoption is no longer optional, and how to actually implement AI and automation without waiting for perfection. Dillon also breaks down a simple three-step system for training your team — record, watch, review — and makes the case that the real competitive advantage in construction isn't just the tools you use, but teaching your people how to think.

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    43 mins