Digital Construction

The new holy grail: data driving design for constructability

Image: 46778950 © Teeraphat Sirisatonpun | Dreamstime.com
How much further can the design for manufacture and assembly (DfMA) approach go? Joel Hutchines calls for data to drive design for constructability.

As the construction industry continues to adopt the DfMA approach, it is moving beyond its buzzword status. Key thought leaders have recently been advocating this movement, notably Autodesk’s Amy Marks, head of industrialised construction strategy and evangelism, who believes that the approach is really about data and collaboration – getting the right data in the right people’s hands as early as possible. It is, in her words, “data for manufacturing and assembly”.

This approach to data is much greater than industrialised construction or prefab, as it is really about design for constructability, the need for more data throughout the entire pre-construction phase.

Data needs to be available to each stakeholder before, during, and after every decision that is made because otherwise, designers have no chance of reducing rework and decreasing waste, whether it be in time, money, effort, or resources. According to studies from both Swinburne University and The Journal of Engineering, the cost of redesign work could be as high as 21% of the project cost.

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