From a residential high-rise in New York City to low-cost
hotels in Europe, the application of prefabricated and modular objects and
systems continues to capture the interest of owners, architects, contractors,
fabricators and product manufacturers in the building industry.
Around the world, prefabrication proponents are finding
ways to apply offsite construction techniques that go way beyond repeatable
systems such as bathroom pods or mechanical pipe rack to more volumetric,
pioneering, semi-customized solutions that address a wide range of common
construction challenges.
“In some parts of the world, like Japan and the United
Kingdom, owners and project teams have necessarily moved to offsite
construction methods because of land prices and the cost of labor,” said Ryan
Smith, associate professor and director in the College of Architecture +
Planning at the University of Utah (USA), and chairman of the National
Institute of Building Sciences’ Off-Site Construction Council (OSCC).
“Amortizing land is prohibitive in these countries, so owners favor methods
that facilitate faster construction schedules. Labor is more expensive, also
necessitating quick turnaround on construction duration.”
However, he added, the greater interest and application
of offsite construction methods in recent years is largely driven by two
ongoing challenges in the global construction industry: the need to improve
construction productivity and skilled-labor shortages in some parts of the
world.
NORTH AMERICAN
METHODS SHIFTING
Concerns about labor shortages are one of the primary
reasons for increased interest in offsite construction in North America. In its
2014 US Markets Construction Overview, FMI, a global provider of management
consulting, investment banking and research to the engineering and construction
industry, predicts that modularization and prefabrication will play an
increasingly vital role in the US construction value chain because emerging
demand is outrunning the availability of skilled tradespeople. Meanwhile, many
international contractors are looking to their European or Asian counterparts
for ideas.
“In our experience, prefabrication and modularization are
primarily driven by our need to be more competitive and deliver a project at
the lowest cost and schedule certainty – and the mechanical, electrical and
plumbing (MEP) subcontractors have taken the lead in delivering effective
solutions for good reason,” said Don Goodrich, director of preconstruction
services at Sundt, a construction company based in Phoenix, Arizona (USA). “The
MEP trades are facing a considerable labor shortage. The increasing use of
Building Information Modeling (BIM) helps bring the prefabrication conversation
to the forefront as well.”
Deciding when to use a prefab approach is based on the
challenges of a specific project, Goodrich said. “We’re translating prefab and
modular techniques that we learn from one job to other jobs as much as
possible,” he said. In one case, Sundt transferred the modular technology
approach from a private prison construction project to a much larger state
prison project.
GLOBAL MULTI-TRADE
OPPORTUNITIES
Similarly, UK-based Balfour Beatty, an international
infrastructure lifecycle services company, relies on prefabrication and modular
methods to construct a number of different structures to achieve considerable
value. Some phases of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, England, for
example, were completed a year early. Likewise, Belgium-based Inter IKEA Group,
parent company of the IKEA furniture brand, teamed with Marriott International,
a hospitality company headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland (USA), to create
low-cost prefabricated hotels in Europe.
FMI Senior Consultant Ethan Cowles expects the use of
prefab and modularization to grow quickly in health care, lodging and
education, as it already has done in the fast food market.
OSCC’s Smith agrees. “We see full volumetric
prefabricated construction mostly with owners of smaller structures, some
housing and some industrial markets,” he said. “Owners of fast-food franchises,
automotive service centers, daycare, data centers, hospitals, multi-family and
mid-rise structures, and others with repeatable structural requirements, are
becoming more engaged in design-build and integrated delivery and are not so
dependent on open bid requirements.”
Looking ahead, Cowles and Smith point to growing interest
and demand for multi-trade prefabrication and modularization. “The success of a
multi-trade scenario will depend on the owner seeing value and capable
contractors coming together contractually to maximize the benefits,” Cowles
said.
RETHINKING
CONVENTIONAL PRACTICES
Despite the promise that prefabrication and
modularization holds for the building industry, the approach is not without
wrinkles – as witnessed by the lawsuits related to New York’s B2 Tower project.
Cowles and Smith noted that offsite approaches inherently
require early coordination and decision-making to maximize the value. Offsite
construction also requires that owners, architects and contractors rethink the
conventional processes that have been industry standards for decades.
“The building technology and methodology for offsite
construction is not mysterious,” Smith said. “There’s very little technical
challenge or complexity to the process, very little intellectual property,
relatively speaking, in comparison to other manufacturing industries. The challenge
has more to do with tacit knowledge related to the social, political,
regulation and economic context in which offsite construction unfolds.”
Integrating prefabrication and modularization into the
construction build cycle adds value, but it’s not a panacea, Smith said. “I
don’t see these methods adopted on every project; but, most certainly, as
components of an overall project build to minimize labor, increase productivity
and improve schedules – in short, to add value.”
Source: Compass
3D
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