Re-use of domain knowledge to provide confidence for adoption of off-site manufacturing for construction in Australia


Autoria(s): Kanjanabootra, Sittimont; Wynn, Moe T.; Ouyang, Chun; Kenley, Russell; Harfield, Toby
Contribuinte(s)

Kashiwagi, Dean

Sullivan, Kenneth

Data(s)

2012

Resumo

Many construction industry decision-makers believe there is a lack of off-site manufacture (OSM) adoption for non-residential construction in Australia. Identification of construction business process was considered imperative in order to assist decision-makers to increase OSM utilisation. The premise that domain knowledge can be re-used to provide an intervention point in the construction process led a team of researchers to construct simple base-line process models for the complete construction process, segmented into six phases. Sixteen domain knowledge industry experts were asked to review the construction phase base-line models to answer the question “Where in the process illustrated by this base-line model phase is an OSM task?”. Through an iterative and generative process a number of off-site manufacture intervention points were identified and integrated into the process models. The re-use of industry expert domain knowledge provided suggestions for new ways to do basic tasks thus facilitating changes to current practice. It is expected that implementation of the new processes will lead to systemic industry change and thus a growth in productivity due to increased adoption of OSM.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/57848/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/57848/1/57848A.pdf

http://www.rics.org/au/knowledge/research/conference-papers/cobra-2012-re-use-of-domain-knowledge-to-provide-confidence-for-adoption-of-osm-for-construction/

Kanjanabootra, Sittimont, Wynn, Moe T., Ouyang, Chun, Kenley, Russell, & Harfield, Toby (2012) Re-use of domain knowledge to provide confidence for adoption of off-site manufacturing for construction in Australia. In Kashiwagi, Dean & Sullivan, Kenneth (Eds.) Proceedings of the Construction, Building and Real Estate Conference 2012, Las Vegas, Nevada, pp. 1270-1277.

Direitos

Copyright 2012 Please consult the authors.

Fonte

Information Systems; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #120201 Building Construction Management and Project Planning #120299 Building not elsewhere classified #150301 Business Information Management (incl. Records Knowledge and Information Management and Intelligence) #adoption confidence #Australia #domain knowledge reuse #OSM
Tipo

Conference Paper