The Daily Dig
ArchKey Holdings Inc., parent company of ArchKey Solutions, has launched ElectriBuilt LLC, a new manufacturing-led company focused on engineered power, data, and network infrastructure products. The company is headquartered in St. Louis and built to serve customers in data centers, advanced manufacturing facilities, and other environments where speed, reliability, and scalability are non-negotiable.
The model centers on doing the hard work before anything arrives on site. Systems are engineered, integrated, and fully tested in a controlled factory environment, then delivered as modular, skidded, or containerized units designed to connect and operate upon delivery. By completing that work in parallel with site preparation, ElectriBuilt aims to streamline installation, reduce variability in the field, and accelerate time to operation.
Repeatable designs are a core part of the approach, creating consistency across projects and geographies. Factory testing is positioned to significantly reduce commissioning risk, and the company is designed to fit into existing project delivery models while helping compress schedules and improve safety and quality.
Steve Stone, CEO of ArchKey Holdings, said ElectriBuilt was launched to solve a problem for customers and partners, with manufacturing discipline applied to improve consistency and give customers greater confidence in project outcomes. Dan Dvorak, Corporate Vice President of ElectriBuilt, pointed to tighter schedules and greater complexity as the conditions driving demand for a model that delivers products ready to perform from day one.
Snapshot:
Company: ElectriBuilt LLC
Parent Company: ArchKey Holdings Inc.
Headquarters: St. Louis, Missouri
Announced: May 21, 2026
Business Type: Manufacturing-led infrastructure products provider
Product Focus: Engineered power, data, and network infrastructure systems
Delivery Format: Modular, skidded, or containerized; commissioning-ready
Target Markets: Data centers, advanced manufacturing, power and data-intensive environments
Key Leadership: Steve Stone, CEO, ArchKey Holdings Inc.; Dan Dvorak, Corporate Vice President, ElectriBuilt LLC
Website: electribuilt.com
TheJobWalk Thoughts
For electrical and low-voltage subs working in the data center and advanced manufacturing space, this model is worth tracking early. When integration and testing move into a factory environment, field work on these projects does not disappear, but it changes shape. Subs who understand where they fit in a pre-integrated delivery model before the bid hits are in a much better position than those who figure it out after.
The repeatable design angle is where the longer-term business implication sits. Owners and developers standardizing on a factory-tested product across a portfolio of projects make that procurement decision well above the individual job. By the time a specific project goes to bid, the key relationship may already be established. For suppliers and subs trying to build a presence in this market, the conversation worth having is not at bid time. It is now.



