Structural VE That Doesn't Compromise Performance
Structural VE done well preserves performance margins. Helonic surfaces opportunities engineers would actually approve.
Structural value engineering is risky if done wrong. Reducing steel by 5% might save real money or might compromise lateral performance. Helonic surfaces VE opportunities that are structurally responsible - items where the documentation reflects conservative design rather than necessary performance, and where simpler alternatives meet the same code and project requirements.
Why most structural VE proposals get rejected
Contractor-side VE proposals often target items the structural engineer was protecting deliberately - redundancy, conservatism on critical paths, simpler-for-the-field choices that hide deeper considerations. Engineer-side VE works backward: identifying conservatism the engineer can give up without affecting performance.
Structural VE workflow
Upload structural set and calculations
Helonic indexes design with explicit awareness of conservatism margins.
Run VE analysis
Opportunities surfaced with material savings and constructability impact estimates.
Review by impact and risk
High-savings, low-risk opportunities prioritized.
Owner conversation
Engineer brings VE log to owner pre-vetted for performance preservation.
How Helonic helps
Engineer-side VE proposals
VE opportunities surfaced from the structural engineer's perspective - items that can be optimized without compromising performance.
Quantified material savings
Each opportunity comes with material savings estimates (tons of steel, cubic yards of concrete).
Constructability-driven opportunities
Many VE wins are constructability - connection simplification, repeated detail use, standard sections.
Code-compliance preserved
Every opportunity checked for code compliance retention at the proposed alternative.
Key features for this workflow
Steel poundage optimization opportunities
Concrete strength and thickness optimization
Connection standardization opportunities
Lateral system simplification
Foundation rationalization
Constructability-driven VE opportunities
Example issues Helonic catches
Real-world issues detected by AI analysis, specific to structural engineers running value engineering:
Roof framing beams at perimeter overdesigned 25% relative to load - standard W16x26 sufficient where W18x40 specified
Slab on grade 6" specified where 4" with proper reinforcement meets the design loads
Multiple custom moment connection details - three standard connection types could cover all needed locations
Foundation excavation depths conservative for the geotechnical bearing capacity available
Concrete shear wall thickness 12" where 10" with proper detailing meets shear capacity
Lateral system uses both moment frames and shear walls in one direction - bracing alone would simplify
What construction professionals told us
“Structural engineers told us they wanted to lead VE conversations instead of defending against them. Engineer-side VE proposals - proactive, performance-preserving - are how they wanted to enter the conversation with the owner and GC.”
Conversations with structural engineering principals across commercial and institutional firms.
FAQs
Can VE be done without recalculating?
Helonic identifies candidates from documentation patterns. Final VE decisions still require the engineer to confirm with calculations.
Does it work on existing buildings?
Yes - particularly well, because existing-building structural projects often carry double redundancy that can be rationalized.
How does it estimate material savings?
Helonic uses standard material cost data and project-specific quantities. Estimates are order-of-magnitude; precise pricing requires fabricator quotes.
Manas Gandhi
Co-founder & CTO, HelonicManas is the co-founder and CTO of Helonic, where he leads engineering and AI research for construction drawing analysis. He works directly with structural, MEP, civil, and fire protection engineers to translate the way they review drawings into AI systems that flag the issues that actually matter in the field. Before Helonic, he built machine learning pipelines for technical document understanding and has spent the last several years interviewing licensed design engineers and discipline leads to ground product decisions in real practice rather than industry assumptions.
- AI for technical document understanding
- Cross-discipline coordination workflows
- Code compliance automation (IBC, NEC, NFPA, IPC, IMC, ASCE)
- Structural and MEP drawing review systems
How this page was researched: Conversations with structural engineering principals across commercial and institutional firms.
Last reviewed by Manas Gandhi · May 2026
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