The Fourth Industrial Revolution has accelerated the adoption of advanced digital technologies in construction, with Digital Twin (DT) emerging as a data-driven framework for enhancing project performance, efficiency, and sustainability. Despite these advantages, DT adoption in construction remains limited due to high implementation costs, data integration challenges, and a lack of standardized practices, especially in real-time data utilization and lifecycle management. This study presents a PRISMA-guided systematic literature review of DT applications across the construction lifecycle. The study addresses three main objectives: (1) to analyze DT’s adoption across construction lifecycle phases, (2) to identify barriers and benefits to DT adoption, and (3) to explore research gaps and potential advancements. Peer-reviewed journal articles published between 2003 and 2024 were retrieved from the Scopus and Web of Science databases using structured keyword combinations related to Digital Twin and the built environment. From an initial pool of 3109 records, 53 studies met predefined inclusion criteria. They were analyzed using a lifecycle-oriented thematic coding framework examining application domains, enabling technologies, reported benefits, and implementation constraints. Unlike prior reviews that focus on specific technologies or lifecycle segments, this study provides a lifecycle-wide synthesis of DT maturity across design, construction, operation, and demolition phases. The findings indicate that DT applications are most developed in the design and operation phases, particularly through integration with Building Information Modeling (BIM) and Internet of Things (IoT) systems for simulation, monitoring, and predictive maintenance. In contrast, construction-phase adoption is constrained by challenges in real-time data integration, while demolition and end-of-life applications remain largely conceptual. Overall, current DT implementations are predominantly phase-specific rather than lifecycle-integrated, therefore emphasizing the need for standardized data frameworks, scalable architectures, and cross-phase governance strategies to enable end-to-end lifecycle digitalization in construction.
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Tran Duong Nguyen
Sanjeev Adhikari
Buildings
Georgia Institute of Technology
Kennesaw State University
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Nguyen et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69ba427c4e9516ffd37a2d7b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16061151
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