Work practices of onsite construction crews and their influence on productivity

The nature of construction work processes allow crews and workers to follow their own practices in how they plan, organise and coordinate work. However, there is little research into the nature of crew work practices. This paper aims to unveil the influence of onsite crew work practices on productiv...

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Main Authors: Santhosh Loganathan, Perry Forsythe, Satyanarayana N Kalidindi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UTS ePRESS 2018-09-01
Series:Construction Economics and Building
Subjects:
Online Access:https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/5973
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spelling doaj-b60c68cae4044b209c82f080bdff16d12020-11-24T21:15:36ZengUTS ePRESSConstruction Economics and Building2204-90292018-09-0118310.5130/AJCEB.v18i3.59735973Work practices of onsite construction crews and their influence on productivitySanthosh Loganathan0Perry Forsythe1Satyanarayana N Kalidindi2School of Built Environment, University of Technology Sydney and Department of Civil Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology MadrasSchool of Built Environment, University of Technology Sydney.Department of Civil Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology MadrasThe nature of construction work processes allow crews and workers to follow their own practices in how they plan, organise and coordinate work. However, there is little research into the nature of crew work practices. This paper aims to unveil the influence of onsite crew work practices on productivity. An exploratory case study investigated work practices on a residential project involving two separate crews (of 18 and 23 workers) engaged in rebar placement for 112 columns each, which included a high-performing and an average-performing crew. A triangulated mixed methods approach to data gathering utilised site observations, individual and group interviews, and time measured work studies, to assess productivity of the crews. The findings indicate that the high-performing crew achieved 44% higher productivity than the average-performing crew and this manifested across specific tasks including rebar cutting, bending, stirrup fabrication and tieing. Five broad work practices were observed to significantly influence the above productivity differences: work preparation and execution strategy; group formation and stability; avoiding duplication of tasks; crew social cohesion; and internal and external leadership practices. These five practices are proposed as dimensions that can be used to measure crew productivity in ongoing research. In-depth understanding of crew based work practices will enable training of foremen and work crews in such practices to systematically develop high-performing crews.https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/5973Construction work crewsProductivityWork practicesTime studyCase study researchMixed methods approach
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Santhosh Loganathan
Perry Forsythe
Satyanarayana N Kalidindi
spellingShingle Santhosh Loganathan
Perry Forsythe
Satyanarayana N Kalidindi
Work practices of onsite construction crews and their influence on productivity
Construction Economics and Building
Construction work crews
Productivity
Work practices
Time study
Case study research
Mixed methods approach
author_facet Santhosh Loganathan
Perry Forsythe
Satyanarayana N Kalidindi
author_sort Santhosh Loganathan
title Work practices of onsite construction crews and their influence on productivity
title_short Work practices of onsite construction crews and their influence on productivity
title_full Work practices of onsite construction crews and their influence on productivity
title_fullStr Work practices of onsite construction crews and their influence on productivity
title_full_unstemmed Work practices of onsite construction crews and their influence on productivity
title_sort work practices of onsite construction crews and their influence on productivity
publisher UTS ePRESS
series Construction Economics and Building
issn 2204-9029
publishDate 2018-09-01
description The nature of construction work processes allow crews and workers to follow their own practices in how they plan, organise and coordinate work. However, there is little research into the nature of crew work practices. This paper aims to unveil the influence of onsite crew work practices on productivity. An exploratory case study investigated work practices on a residential project involving two separate crews (of 18 and 23 workers) engaged in rebar placement for 112 columns each, which included a high-performing and an average-performing crew. A triangulated mixed methods approach to data gathering utilised site observations, individual and group interviews, and time measured work studies, to assess productivity of the crews. The findings indicate that the high-performing crew achieved 44% higher productivity than the average-performing crew and this manifested across specific tasks including rebar cutting, bending, stirrup fabrication and tieing. Five broad work practices were observed to significantly influence the above productivity differences: work preparation and execution strategy; group formation and stability; avoiding duplication of tasks; crew social cohesion; and internal and external leadership practices. These five practices are proposed as dimensions that can be used to measure crew productivity in ongoing research. In-depth understanding of crew based work practices will enable training of foremen and work crews in such practices to systematically develop high-performing crews.
topic Construction work crews
Productivity
Work practices
Time study
Case study research
Mixed methods approach
url https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/5973
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