Construction
Overview
Construction spans careers in designing, planning, building and maintaining the physical world. It covers Architecture & Civil Engineering, Construction Planning & Development, Equipment Operation & Maintenance and Skilled Trades, with roles ranging from civil engineers and architects to carpenters, electricians and HVAC technicians, and growing demand in sustainable and smart building.

Did you know?
Construction is one of the oldest and most future-proof professions on Earth. From the pyramids of Egypt to the Sydney Metro, humans have always needed skilled people to design, build and maintain the physical world, and that need is not going anywhere.
At a glance
1.7M+
Maintenance jobs
7%
Electrician growth
9
Emerging role types
Top 5 Occupations
Based on Employment Growth

Earth Drillers
🔥 Fast GrowingConstruction Trades Assistants
🔥 Fast GrowingConstruction Helper - Masonry and Tiling

Insulation Workers, Mechanical

Architects
A lot of students only know 2 or 3 construction jobs. There are way more than most people expect.
More about the Construction industry
Construction is where plans become real. From the roads and bridges you cross every day to the hospitals, schools and offices that serve entire communities, someone designed it, planned it and built it. Beyond the physical build itself, this industry also covers the ongoing work of maintaining, inspecting and upgrading the structures and systems that keep everything running. It's a broad field that spans creative, technical and hands-on work.
It covers four main areas: Architecture & Civil Engineering, where structures are designed and planned; Construction Planning & Development, which handles site analysis, cost estimation, permits and project management before work begins; Equipment Operation & Maintenance, keeping heavy machinery running safely and efficiently on site; and Skilled Trades, the hands-on expertise of carpentry, electrical systems, plumbing, HVAC, welding, masonry and more.
Entry into this field is genuinely flexible. You can start with a trade apprenticeship, a two-year technical program or a four-year degree in engineering or architecture, and still end up working on the same project. Growing demand for sustainable building practices is reshaping roles across every area, with green construction techniques, modular building methods and renewable energy integration becoming increasingly central to the work.