Digital Construction

How Bryden Wood is evolving the platform approach

A photo of HMP Five Wells, which used Bryden Wood's platform approach
HMP Five Wells in Wellingborough: the house blocks were highly standardised, highly optimised and are now being rolled out across the Ministry of Justice estate

Bryden Wood, the integrated architectural and engineering practice, brought the concept of a platform approach to design, which was adopted by government for its prisons programme. Since then it has evolved the idea of templated designs to offer standardisation and flexibility to suit varied sites. Jaimie Johnston MBE, a board director at the practice and brains behind the platform approach, brings u003cemu003eBIMplusu003c/emu003e up to date.

When it comes to turning design and construction from a site-based process into something finely honed, digitally-based and factory-fabricated, Bryden Wood has been at the forefront. Central to its thinking has been so-called platform design a digitally designed kit of parts manufactured in a factory that can be used across many kinds of asset.

In doing so, it creates a high-volume, consistent demand so that a wide, diverse supply chain can make use of the common components, akin if you like, to the approach Ikea takes with its components for flatpack furniture. This, of itself, creates economies of scale and dramatically increases productivity.

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