Easycube Attends Future Greenland With Remote-Site Building Experience

French modular construction company Easycube will attend Future Greenland 2026 in Nuuk this week as part of a French business delegation supported by Business France, the French Embassy in Copenhagen, the French Economic Service, and the French Consulate in Nuuk.

Adrien Teissonnière, Business Unit Manager for Public Affairs, Defense & Security, said the company is attending Future Greenland to learn more about Greenland’s future projects and meet local partners.

“This mission is one of discovery for me,” Teissonnière told GreenlandEnergy.com.

Easycube is the export branch of the French Groupe Dreyer, which has more than 50 years of experience in France’s agri-food sector, especially cold rooms and insulated buildings. Easycube has exported that expertise since 2010 and has worked in remote and complex locations across Africa, Asia, Europe, and other regions.

The company’s Greenland interest centers on a practical need: remote-site modular infrastructure, fast, insulated, modular buildings for remote locations. For Greenland, that need connects directly to mining, tourism, logistics, airport support, worker housing, and the basic facilities required before larger projects can operate.

Teissonnière said Easycube’s combination of insulation expertise and quick industrial construction could fit Greenland needs such as accommodation, hotels, and technical buildings.

Building the Practical Infrastructure Around Projects

Easycube designs and builds what Teissonnière called “small cities” for remote projects.

Those facilities can include base camps, dormitories, industrial kitchens, restaurants, sanitary facilities, fitness centers, clinics, field hospitals, workshops, warehouses, HVAC systems, cranes, CCTV, security systems, and utility networks such as energy, compressed air, water treatment, and waste management.

That type of infrastructure sits close to many of the themes expected at Future Greenland: workforce development, mining, logistics, industrial capacity, construction, tourism, and the practical challenge of building in remote Arctic locations.

Easycube’s model focuses on designing buildings off-site, transporting them by air, road, or sea, and assembling them with local involvement where possible.

Teissonnière said industrial buildings can save more than 50 percent of construction time compared with traditional concrete work. He also said each building is designed for its specific location, which can help reduce cost.

Remote and Harsh-Weather Experience

Easycube points to several examples of difficult deployments.

The company delivered a reefer warehouse in Saint Pierre, near Canada, where Teissonnière said the building has faced years of heavy snowstorms without problems. It also delivered a technical building in Kerguelen, near Antarctica, which involved a major logistics challenge.

Easycube buildings are also used by the French army in Estonia, Poland, and Romania.

According to Teissonnière, Easycube’s buildings are designed by an in-house engineering department and architect under EuroCodes, while transport is handled by the company’s in-house logistics department.

Local Assembly and Training

One part of Easycube’s model will be especially relevant in Greenland: local involvement.

Teissonnière said the company has long relied on local partners and local training when assembling projects abroad. He described it as both a cost-saving measure and a social contract.

Using local labor reduces the need to transport and house large numbers of outside workers. It can also leave behind skills and relationships after a project is completed.

“In many countries worldwide we trained local people and partners, and they remain our partners since then,” Teissonnière said.

Listening Before Selling

Teissonnière said Easycube does not want to arrive in Greenland with a fixed standard solution.

He said outside companies need to understand Greenland’s local way of life and way of working before proposing infrastructure.

“What works somewhere may not be the dedicated solution somewhere else,” he said.

Future Greenland 2026 takes place May 19–20 at Katuaq in Nuuk under the theme “The Future is Greenland – Business Development in the Arctic Decade.” Easycube’s attendance adds another practical infrastructure voice to the conference: how to build the facilities that make larger projects possible.

GreenlandEnergy.com provides independent analysis of Greenland’s energy landscape, critical minerals development, and Arctic geopolitics. For corrections or feedback: press@greenlandenergy.com

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