Usually, new buildings are inspected by government building code enforcement authorities periodically throughout their construction to ensure that building codes are met. They inspect the foundation, structure, electrical, plumbing, and so on. Home inspectors are for buildings that are being sold from one party to another and they are generally looking for defects that have developed over the course of use of the building.
For instance, assume a contractor builds a house. Code enforcement will ensure the house is structurally sound and meets applicable building codes. When the contractor goes to sell the house on the open market, the buyers will hire an home inspector to come in and look at the home.
They will check to make sure the building looks good and things like cabinets and carpet are installed correctly. Code enforcement doesn't care whether the cabinets look good, they care whether the foundation is solid and electrical won't burn the house down. As a result, the contractor himself doesn't need a home inspector.
Code enforcement ensures building codes are met and the contractor himself ensures that he builds non-code things correctly. The buyer uses a home inspector to go behind the contractor to double check that he is competent and honest in his work. If you contract someone to build you a building, generally you will hire an inspector to periodically go through and double check your contractor's work.
In this case, however, you are generally using another contractor, not a home inspector, because home inspectors are usually not qualified to inspect things like wiring, building materials, costs and cost overruns, structure, and so on.
If you mean a construction quality control consultant, that's different.
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