Integrated Design and Manufacturing [IDM] Framework for the Modular Construction Industry

If we look at the construction industry, particularly the modular single-family construction industry, we often see that the design stage is distinctly separate from the construction and fabrication stages. This separation has been occurring for some time now, however, there is often a noticeable la...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alkahlan, Bandar Suliman
Other Authors: Architecture
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/81418
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-81418
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-814182020-09-29T05:34:49Z Integrated Design and Manufacturing [IDM] Framework for the Modular Construction Industry Alkahlan, Bandar Suliman Architecture Jones, James R. Grant, Elizabeth J. Schubert, Robert P. Camelio, Jaime A. Hardiman, Tom Modular Housing Digital Fabrication Mass Production Mass Customization Off-Site Fabrication Assembly. If we look at the construction industry, particularly the modular single-family construction industry, we often see that the design stage is distinctly separate from the construction and fabrication stages. This separation has been occurring for some time now, however, there is often a noticeable lack of understanding of the constraints in linking architectural design to modular construction for single-family housing. In addition, no framework exists which seeks to support overcoming these constraints for the architectural design process while simultaneously bringing knowledge of fabrication, materials selection, and modular construction to the early stage of design. Also, there is a lack of knowledge of fabrication and modular construction constraints by many architects. This research intended to focus upon mapping the design and manufacturing processes for a specific scale of projects: residential single-family units. The research also aimed to understand the relationships among design, the role of emerging technologies, and manufacturing within the modular home construction industry in order to develop a design process that is based upon mass customization, rather than mass production. Thus, qualitative research methods based upon a grounded theory approach were used for evaluating, capturing, and structuring knowledge. To achieve the greatest possible amount of useful information, case studies of on-site visits to manufactured housing production facilities and structured, in-depth, open-ended interviews of architects, engineers, production managers, business managers, and other knowledge-holders within the manufactured modular housing industry were performed. The aim of this research was to map the design and modular homes manufacturing processes in an effort to better understand the relationships between these two domains. The Integration Definition (IDEF0) for Function Modeling was used as a graphical presentation technique. The goal of using such a graphical technique was, first, to understand and analyze the functions of the existing "As-is" design-manufacture communication process; and second, to enhance and improve the communication and productivity performances among people working in the design, manufacturing, and production sectors. Using this graphical modeling method assisted with mapping the design and modular manufacturing processes, including organizations, teams, decisions, actions, and activities. Through this mapping process, strategies to improve the emergent relationships were proposed as a new "To-be" design and manufacturing framework for modular single-family housing projects. Ph. D. 2017-12-24T07:01:04Z 2017-12-24T07:01:04Z 2016-07-01 Dissertation vt_gsexam:8456 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/81418 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Modular Housing
Digital Fabrication
Mass Production
Mass Customization
Off-Site Fabrication
Assembly.
spellingShingle Modular Housing
Digital Fabrication
Mass Production
Mass Customization
Off-Site Fabrication
Assembly.
Alkahlan, Bandar Suliman
Integrated Design and Manufacturing [IDM] Framework for the Modular Construction Industry
description If we look at the construction industry, particularly the modular single-family construction industry, we often see that the design stage is distinctly separate from the construction and fabrication stages. This separation has been occurring for some time now, however, there is often a noticeable lack of understanding of the constraints in linking architectural design to modular construction for single-family housing. In addition, no framework exists which seeks to support overcoming these constraints for the architectural design process while simultaneously bringing knowledge of fabrication, materials selection, and modular construction to the early stage of design. Also, there is a lack of knowledge of fabrication and modular construction constraints by many architects. This research intended to focus upon mapping the design and manufacturing processes for a specific scale of projects: residential single-family units. The research also aimed to understand the relationships among design, the role of emerging technologies, and manufacturing within the modular home construction industry in order to develop a design process that is based upon mass customization, rather than mass production. Thus, qualitative research methods based upon a grounded theory approach were used for evaluating, capturing, and structuring knowledge. To achieve the greatest possible amount of useful information, case studies of on-site visits to manufactured housing production facilities and structured, in-depth, open-ended interviews of architects, engineers, production managers, business managers, and other knowledge-holders within the manufactured modular housing industry were performed. The aim of this research was to map the design and modular homes manufacturing processes in an effort to better understand the relationships between these two domains. The Integration Definition (IDEF0) for Function Modeling was used as a graphical presentation technique. The goal of using such a graphical technique was, first, to understand and analyze the functions of the existing "As-is" design-manufacture communication process; and second, to enhance and improve the communication and productivity performances among people working in the design, manufacturing, and production sectors. Using this graphical modeling method assisted with mapping the design and modular manufacturing processes, including organizations, teams, decisions, actions, and activities. Through this mapping process, strategies to improve the emergent relationships were proposed as a new "To-be" design and manufacturing framework for modular single-family housing projects. === Ph. D.
author2 Architecture
author_facet Architecture
Alkahlan, Bandar Suliman
author Alkahlan, Bandar Suliman
author_sort Alkahlan, Bandar Suliman
title Integrated Design and Manufacturing [IDM] Framework for the Modular Construction Industry
title_short Integrated Design and Manufacturing [IDM] Framework for the Modular Construction Industry
title_full Integrated Design and Manufacturing [IDM] Framework for the Modular Construction Industry
title_fullStr Integrated Design and Manufacturing [IDM] Framework for the Modular Construction Industry
title_full_unstemmed Integrated Design and Manufacturing [IDM] Framework for the Modular Construction Industry
title_sort integrated design and manufacturing [idm] framework for the modular construction industry
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/81418
work_keys_str_mv AT alkahlanbandarsuliman integrateddesignandmanufacturingidmframeworkforthemodularconstructionindustry
_version_ 1719343962472316928