“Construction doesn’t have a technology problem. It has a courage problem.”

“Construction doesn’t have a technology problem. It has a courage problem.”

“Construction doesn’t have a technology problem. It has a courage problem.”

I'm KP Reddy, a second-generation civil engineer. My father built things. I grew up on job sites. The built environment isn't just an industry to me — it's how my family served the world.


I've spent 25+ years at the intersection of construction and technology. I've founded companies and taken them public on NASDAQ and NYSE. I led enterprise transformation at Gehry Technologies. I ran one of the country's oldest tech incubators at Georgia Tech. I've invested in dozens of startups through Shadow Ventures. I wrote the book on BIM — literally.


After all of that, I arrived at an uncomfortable truth: the construction industry doesn't have a technology problem. It has a courage problem. We keep buying tools to patch a system that was never designed to serve the people it should — the owners, the communities, the society that depends on what we build.


Zero isn't another company. It's the answer to a question I've been asking my entire career: what happens when you stop trying to make a broken system more efficient and instead build a new one — designed around the owner, powered by real innovation, and measured by impact?


Hospitals where patients heal. Data centers that power breakthroughs. Schools where the next generation learns. Housing that families can actually afford. That's what construction is for. Somewhere along the way, the industry forgot that.


I didn't start Zero to build a business. I started it to prove that this industry can undergo a metamorphosis — and that our success should be measured not by revenue, but by the societal impact of what we help bring into the world.


We're funded. We're building. And we're just getting started.


If this resonates with you, I invite you to join us.


KP Reddy

Founder & CEO

I'm KP Reddy, a second-generation civil engineer. My father built things. I grew up on job sites. The built environment isn't just an industry to me — it's how my family served the world.


I've spent 25+ years at the intersection of construction and technology. I've founded companies and taken them public on NASDAQ and NYSE. I led enterprise transformation at Gehry Technologies. I ran one of the country's oldest tech incubators at Georgia Tech. I've invested in dozens of startups through Shadow Ventures. I wrote the book on BIM — literally.


After all of that, I arrived at an uncomfortable truth: the construction industry doesn't have a technology problem. It has a courage problem. We keep buying tools to patch a system that was never designed to serve the people it should — the owners, the communities, the society that depends on what we build.


Zero isn't another company. It's the answer to a question I've been asking my entire career: what happens when you stop trying to make a broken system more efficient and instead build a new one — designed around the owner, powered by real innovation, and measured by impact?


Hospitals where patients heal. Data centers that power breakthroughs. Schools where the next generation learns. Housing that families can actually afford. That's what construction is for. Somewhere along the way, the industry forgot that.


I didn't start Zero to build a business. I started it to prove that this industry can undergo a metamorphosis — and that our success should be measured not by revenue, but by the societal impact of what we help bring into the world.


We're funded. We're building. And we're just getting started.


If this resonates with you, I invite you to join us.


KP Reddy

Founder & CEO

Locations

Atlanta

San Francisco

Boston

New York

Denver

© 2026 Zero RFI. All rights reserved.

Locations

Atlanta

San Francisco

Boston

New York

Denver

© 2026 Zero RFI. All rights reserved.

Locations

Atlanta

San Francisco

Boston

New York

Denver

© 2026 Zero RFI. All rights reserved.