With its extreme heat, seismicity, and salt-rich corrosive soils, the Saudi Arabian port city of Jazan is no easy place to build.Ā So, when a huge grain warehouse in the city started to sink, crack, and warp, it presented a majorāand potentially eye-wateringly expensiveāproblem to fix.
Local engineering firmĀ GeoStruXerĀ stepped in, harnessing data, 3D digital modeling, and artificial intelligence (AI) to uncover what the ground was hidingāa vast, slowly dissolving salt domeāand design a rehabilitation plan. First, GeoStruXer used Bentley Systemsā PLAXIS software. The advanced 3D application helps engineers model how soil, foundations, and structures interact, and GeoStruXer used it to come up with a calibrated ground model. Then the team turned to AI, running an algorithm to reveal how many micropiles the foundation needed and where, a move that automated what would otherwise have taken months of manual engineering.
The food security warehouse (bottom left) at Jazan City Port was saved by GeostruXer using Bentley software.GeoStruXerās design not only rescued the sinking 12,000-square-meter grain warehouse, a critical food security hub for over 1.5 million people, it slashed material use and carbon emissions by over 70% and saved more than $2 million in costs. Bentley hailed it as an example of how engineers can use AI alongside Bentley applications to deliver more resilient infrastructure.
The Jazan warehouse project, which was a recipient of the Bentley-Envision Award for Sustainable Infrastructure at the 2025 Year in Infrastructure conference in Amsterdam, is just one example of sustainable infrastructure highlighted in Bentleyās Impact Report 2025. The annual report showcases how Bentley is shrinking its own environmental footprint and helping users develop more sustainable, resilient infrastructureāincreasingly with the help of AI.
For example, a project from geothermal company Fervo Energy shows how AI data centers can tap geothermal energy to power their operations and lower their carbon footprint. āThis really is the frontier of a whole new wave of potential renewable energy technology that could transform the power system, both within the U.S. and in other places around the world,ā said Graham Grant, CEO of Seequent, the Bentley subsurface company. Fervo Energyās geothermal projectĀ wonĀ a Going Digital Award at the 2025 Year in Infrastructure conference.
āIn 2025,Ā we have seen infrastructure organizations move beyond investing in AI for their business functions and begin exploring its potential for their core engineering work,āĀ Bentley CEO NicholasĀ Cumins said in a message introducing the report. āThey recognize,Ā as we do,Ā that AIĀ can be a force multiplier for every infrastructure professional.ā
Cumins called AI a āstep-changeā in productivity that will help close the gap between demand for better infrastructure and the engineering capacity to deliver it. He also addressed sustainability questions about AI’s rapid adoption. Acknowledging the paradox that AI data centers strain infrastructure, Cumins stressed the mandate to apply AI to optimize the very systems it relies on, turning the challenge into the solution.
ThatāsĀ why Bentley has embedded AIĀ capabilities into its coreĀ Open Applicationsāautomating time-consuming tasks like the generation of 2D drawings from 3D modelsāand made it easier for infrastructure organizations to use AI to tap into valuable dataĀ from past projects andĀ managed inĀ Bentley Infrastructure Cloud.
In their message accompanying the report, Angela Curry, Bentleyās chief compliance officer, and Chris Bradshaw, chief sustainability and education officer, hailed how Bentley colleagues have learned āhow to incorporate AI into their daily work while advancing these capabilities for our users.āāÆ
The report lists multiple examples of Bentleyās commitment to trustworthy AI.
- In 2026,Ā Bentley launched a co-innovation initiative for users to shape the development of trustworthy AI for infrastructure.
- BentleyāsĀ Data Agreement RegistryĀ protects intellectual property and gives users fullĀ control over their data,Ā includingĀ ifĀ andĀ howĀ itāsĀ used for AI training.
- Bentleyās AI Community of Practice,Ā a place to experiment with and debate the best AI tools,Ā grew to over 700 members.
- In 2025,Ā Bentley launched theĀ AI in Infrastructure report,Ā which polled leading infrastructure professionals across the globe on their firmsā readiness for AI.
- Bentleyās annual puzzle-solving OCTO Coding Challenge in 2025 explored how AIĀ can change the way participants think about coding.
Beyond the impact of Bentleyās technology and governance, the report also details the company’s commitment to its operational footprint, its people, and its communitiesāfrom achieving carbon neutrality to fostering a highly recommended workplace and empowering the next generation of engineers.
Bentley, The Numbers:
- $1.5 billion in annual revenueĀ
- 5,800 colleagues in 45 countriesĀ
- 93% of top engineering firms use BentleyĀ
- 700 colleagues in AI CoP membersĀ
- $7 million donated to community outreach + educationĀ
- 11% more pledged through Bentleyās STEM grants in 2025Ā
