TITEL
Timber volume element prefabrication: production and market aspects
FöRFATTARE
Höök, Matilda
INSTITUTION
Samhällsbyggnad / Byggkonstruktion
SAMMANFATTNING
Problems discussed within the Swedish housing industry are lack of
competition, quality and increased costs. Improvements to cope with these
problems have shown to be low compared to manufacturing and other
industries. Explanations are argued to be industry specific differences,
peculiarities and the culture of construction, and thus implicate a need
for development of innovations that can manage the peculiarities and
culture of construction. The industry specific differences between
manufacturing and construction also detain transfer of competitive
management principles from process oriented manufacturing to project
oriented construction. Timber prefabrication is argued to be a possible
catalyst for improvements towards industrialization and process orientation
in Swedish housing construction. The comprehensive aim of this research is
therefore to develop the understanding of obstacles and feasible
improvements in Swedish housing based on timber prefabrication through the
investigation of timber component supplying generally and timber volume
element prefabrication specifically.
The study embrace one comparative multiple case study including five
different material component suppliers, and investigates differences in
business and market strategies for timber components suppliers compared to
steel and concrete components suppliers. Secondly a multiple case study
including the five leading Swedish timber volume element manufacturers are
performed. The case study describes hindrance and possibilities of timber
volume element production. Third, a survey of 57 possible customers of
timber volume element prefabricated houses is performed to increase the
understanding of the low adoption rate of timber volume element
prefabrication in commercial buildings and multi-family and multi-storey
housing. To support and develop the understanding of hindrances and
possibilities for timber prefabrication and timber volume element
prefabrication, literature studies are executed within complex system
theory, innovation diffusion and adoption theory and lean and agile
production.
To reach the same improvements as manufacturing and to enable transfer of
management principles to construction, the results in this thesis has shown
a need for increased structure in construction. It is argued that timber
volume element prefabrication has the possibility to increase structure and
hence the building system can serve as a platform for transfer of
management principles from manufacturing to construction.
However, findings also demonstrate that there is a missing link for
customer adoption of timber volume element prefabrication in multi-storey
housing. The building system has not always the possibility to respond to
customers’ needs of contemporaneous flexibility in design together with low
costs and short lead times. Potential customers are positive to timber
volume element prefabrication for two-storey houses, but findings also
suggest that adoption is prevented by a distrust of timber volume element
prefabrication as a building system for multi-storey housing. To obtain
increased use of timber prefabrication and thus potential development in
housing, this study indicates that there is a need for increased
information transfer to potential customers to obtain trust towards the
timber manufacturers and the building systems. Thus, to enable adoption of
innovations in housing construction that is deep-rooted in historical
knowledge and attitudes, this research shows that innovation diffusion and
adoption have to be supported by visual and personal experienced knowledge,
e.g. via demonstration objects and strategic alliances.
ISSN 1402-1757 / ISRN LTU-LIC--05/65--SE / NR 2005:65
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