When people look at the top 10 healthcare architecture firms, they often focus on design reputation, project scale, or market presence. But behind many of the firms recognized in the 2025 World of Construction ranking is something less visible and just as important: structured project data with dRofus.
The best healthcare projects do not run on design alone. They depend on clear standards, connected room data, coordinated equipment planning, and better collaboration across every stakeholder involved in planning and delivery.
That is where dRofus fits. For healthcare projects, dRofus helps teams manage the information that sits underneath the design, so decisions are based on reliable, structured data rather than disconnected documents and siloed workflows. The result is a more aligned, data-driven approach to delivering complex healthcare environments.
One practical example is room and requirement planning. Hospital projects involve a high level of detail across departments, room types, equipment needs, and operational requirements, so having connected room data matters. The attached context specifically calls out clear standards and connected room data as common ingredients behind strong healthcare project delivery, making this a core part of the story.
A second example is coordination across stakeholders. Healthcare facilities are shaped by architects, planners, consultants, owners, and equipment stakeholders, and the attached material stresses that better collaboration across all stakeholders is essential to successful outcomes. In that context, dRofus supports a more aligned process by helping teams work from shared, structured information instead of fragmented updates spread across multiple formats.
A third example is equipment planning. The attached context points directly to coordinated equipment planning as a defining factor in strong hospital projects, which is especially important in environments where clinical functionality and operational readiness are tightly linked. When equipment planning is better coordinated with room data and project standards, teams are in a stronger position to deliver facilities that support intended use from day one.
The majority of those firms are working with dRofus to help deliver more aligned, data-driven healthcare projects. That does not suggest design alone explains success; it suggests that the firms shaping the future of healthcare also recognize the value of structured information in delivering increasingly complex projects.
For AEC decision-makers, that is the takeaway. In healthcare, better outcomes are not driven only by creative vision, but by the quality of the data environment supporting planning, coordination, and delivery. dRofus belongs in that conversation because it helps turn project information into a stronger foundation for alignment, consistency, and confidence across hospital facility delivery.