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Abdullah, A K and Alshibani, A (2022) Multi-criteria decision-making framework for selecting sustainable private partners for housing projects. Journal of Financial Management of Property and Construction, 27(01), 112-40.

Ginigaddara, B, Perera, S, Feng, Y and Rahnamayiezekavat, P (2022) An evaluation of offsite construction skill profiles. Journal of Financial Management of Property and Construction, 27(01), 16-28.

  • Type: Journal Article
  • Keywords: construction industry; industrialisation; learning skills; offsite manufacturing; skill profiles
  • ISBN/ISSN:
  • URL: https://doi.org/10.1108/JFMPC-08-2020-0057
  • Abstract:
    Purpose: This paper aims to evaluate the existing and emerging Offsite Construction (OSC) skills. Construction industry is inherently labour oriented, fashioning poor labour productivity, low sustainability, slow and costly processes. These shortcomings promote OSC alongside driving forces such as industrialisation, automation and digitalisation. However, the traditional construction skills are not on par with the complexity, where robots, co-bots and digital-driven automated systems create the need for novel OSC skills. Design/methodology/approach: Data collection is executed through a Roundtable activity hosting Construction Management academics form Australian universities specialising in construction technology. They engaged in ranking of skills along with creating a word cloud for the question, “what are the future construction skills that will be more beneficial in an OSC platform?” Word cloud is reviewed in a discussion approach while skills ranking data is analysed using descriptive statistics. Findings: The most prominent OSC skills are logistics manager, project manager and digital producer. Attributes of skills that come under construction trades workers, design, engineering and specialist professionals will vary based on onsite-offsite percentage combination in a construction project. Study reviews the required construction skills at two ends of a continuum featuring the trade-based skills; bricklayer, concreter and carpenter at one end (traditional build) and the heavily digitalised and automated skills at the other end (OSC). The noticeable transition towards OSC urges industry practitioners, policy-makers and education providers to focus on understanding and cultivating key OSC skills. Originality/value: This study describes the transition of skills from onsite to OSC. It is presented as one of the earliest attempts to evaluate OSC skill profiles. © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited.

Kumar, A, Srivastava, V, Tabash, M I and Chawda, D (2022) Profitability determinants of infrastructure public private partnerships (PPPs): empirical evidence from Indian data. Journal of Financial Management of Property and Construction, 27(01), 91-111.

Mahmud, A T, Ogunlana, S O and Hong, W T (2022) Understanding the dynamics of cost overrun triggers in highway infrastructure projects in Nigeria: a systems thinking modelling approach. Journal of Financial Management of Property and Construction, 27(01), 29-56.

Ojo, A, Ogunsina, O and Ogunsemi, D R (2022) Assessment of cost management practices of civil engineering (project procurement) organisations in Ondo State, Nigeria. Journal of Financial Management of Property and Construction, 27(01), 57-75.

Owusu-Manu, D G, Amo-Asamoah, E, Ghansah, F A and Asumadu, G (2022) An analysis of the economic viability of waste-to-energy generation in the Kumasi metropolis of Ghana. Journal of Financial Management of Property and Construction, 27(01), 1-15.

Singla, H K and Samanta, P K (2022) Identification of critical success factors (CSFs) for real estate developers (REDs) in India. Journal of Financial Management of Property and Construction, 27(01), 76-90.