Digital Construction

We must use DfMA to deliver the offsite dream

A section of the Vita Student Westgate in Newcastle (courtesy of Trimble)
To deliver on the vision of offsite as the future of construction, we need to change the way we approach projects, taking a Design for Manufacture and Assembly (DfMA) approach, says Duncan Reed, digital construction process manager at Trimble (UK).

Offsite construction is currently a big topic of conversation within the industry – and understandably so. While its benefits are well known and widely publicised, the UK government has also delivered a clear push on these more modern construction methods. Forming a key part of its ‘building back better, faster and greener’ campaign, offsite features heavily within the 2020 Construction Playbook too, containing recommended best practices for sourcing, contracting and delivering public works projects.  

However, if we are to truly deliver on the offsite vision and reap its promised rewards, it needs to be considered from the very outset of a project and then maintained throughout. Indeed, despite the title (offsite construction), the process stretches far beyond just the final construction and assembly phase.

Instead, projects need to be designed with offsite in mind, which is where DfMA comes into play. DfMA works to take offsite further, from construction to assembly with an approach that focuses upon driving the design process towards creating a manufactured solution using standardised components, for ease of manufacture and efficiency of assembly.

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