Building construction dictates logistic challenges: closing streets off to traffic, delivering materials and oversized machinery to sites, and disposing unused or hazardous materials are just a few elements that underscore the intricacies associated with even the most accessible sites. These complications are exponentially augmented in remote locations with extreme climate conditions where construction is limited to certain seasons.
Beyond the habitual obstacles faced in accessible communities, the housing supply crisis in remote areas like the Far North is compounded by sociodemographic barriers including years of underfunding, a tenuous grasp of local housing demand and building culture, sizeable distances between communities, and rapidly changing climatic conditions accelerated by global warming. Further, construction’s highly fragmented design to delivery process is aggravated by difficult to reach sites impeding the normative, quick, effective and sustainable supply of housing. Prefabricated houses have been proposed to solve some of these issues, however the logistical challenges of onsite delivery and completion along with low social acceptability of shipping less than adapted housing exacerbates the already problematic context.
An issue that should be addressed is the convoluted delocalized supply chains disconnected from local settings and onsite assembly in communities without existing production infrastructure. Construction Consolidation Centres (CCCs) are increasingly researched and explored to harmonize the just-in-time delivery of components to complex building contexts. A combination of management, logistical and distribution facilities receive orders for components and materials which can be assembled into large modular building chunks or optimally packaged as kits-of-parts to reduce onsite time or waste and ensure efficient resource management.
Governance of these CCCs for remote construction would have the potential to link multiple communities, achieve economies of scale, and prepare optimal housing bundles into ready-to-deliver loads. A co-op CCC operated by neighbouring communities enables coordination of diverse physical and social needs. Beyond the grounded harmonization of actors, CCCs require a political will combined with policy tuning supply with delivery, along with pertinent design, inspection and operation criteria for quality products. The CCC model combined with offsite preassembly can be a way forward for reducing the entanglement of actors, methods, materials and components associated with conventional supply models.
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Construction Consolidation Centre imagined by CSB Logistics - https://www.csblogistics.com/ |