Construction in Georgia

Georgia Construction Intel

Friday, July 10, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on construction developments in Georgia. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on georgia construction headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Georgia Construction Headlines

1 story

1.1

New Commercial Construction Projects in Georgia | ConstructConnect.

Quick, comprehensive access to construction projects in Georgia for bid, including exclusive projects, plans, specs, bidder lists, and project details.

Why It Matters

Relevant to construction professionals operating in GA.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

The mechanics-lien clock starts before you think.

In most GA jurisdictions, the lien filing deadline runs from last day on the project OR last delivery of materials, whichever is later — but several states use a project-wide cutoff (substantial completion) regardless of when your specific work ended. Counting the wrong start date is the leading cause of waived liens.

Why It Matters

A blown lien deadline drops your collateral down to a personal-guaranty claim, which often means recovery cents on the dollar. The window is short — 60 to 120 days in most states.

2.2

Why a foundation problem is almost always a soils-report problem.

Foundation failures rarely originate at the slab; they originate in soil bearing capacity, drainage, or expansive-clay behavior that was either uninvestigated or not honored in the design. A geotechnical report that is older than the building's design or that did not sample at the actual building footprint is a red flag.

Why It Matters

Foundation remediation costs typically exceed the original foundation cost by 5-10x. Investing in current, footprint-specific geotechnical work is the cheapest insurance a project carries.

2.3

Pay-when-paid versus pay-if-paid — the one-word difference.

"Pay-when-paid" sets a timing condition only — the GC must still pay even if the owner never does. "Pay-if-paid" creates a true condition precedent — no owner payment, no GC payment to subs. Many states will not enforce pay-if-paid clauses without unmistakably clear language; ambiguity defaults to pay-when-paid.

Why It Matters

The risk allocation between subcontractors and GCs hinges on this one phrase. Subs who sign pay-if-paid contracts effectively underwrite owner credit risk on top of project risk.

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Issue Summary

DateJul 10, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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