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Causes and mitigation for declining productivity in the Australian mid-rise residential construction sector

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 04:50 authored by Tillmann BoehmeTillmann Boehme, Alberto Escribano, Emma Heffernan, Scott Beazley
Purpose The construction industry is a significant driver of economic activity in many countries. However, there has been a lack of growth in productivity within the Australian construction sector over recent years. The purpose of this paper is to gain an in-depth understanding of the causes for declining productivity within the Australian mid-rise residential construction network. Design/methodology/approach Two in-depth case studies have been conducted with a builder and developer, both significant entities of the Australian mid-rise residential construction network. Case study data collection comprised a five-stage process including semi-structured interviews and archival information review. Findings Drivers for declining construction productivity were identified under the categories of: industry-, firm- and project-level productivity. The drivers include: incomplete documentation, design changes, inefficient project management, supply chain fragmentation, among others. Originality/value The contribution of this study is the identification and categorisation of major issues impacting sector productivity along the mid-rise residential construction supply chain. The research identified that the substructure and superstructure are the construction phases during which most productivity losses occur. Mitigations are discussed in terms of systemic sector productivity increases at an industry, firm and project levels.

Funding

ARC Research Hub for Australian Steel Manufacturing

Australian Research Council

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Citation

Boehme, T., Escribano, A., Heffernan, E. E. & Beazley, S. (2018). Causes and mitigation for declining productivity in the Australian mid-rise residential construction sector. Built Environment Project and Asset Management, 8 (3), 253-266.

Journal title

Built Environment Project and Asset Management

Volume

8

Issue

3

Pagination

253-266

Language

English

RIS ID

128608

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