Friday, June 12, 2026

Prefabrication experiments - 516 - Predictable demand - scaling capacity

 

As the housing crisis deepens, shortages are accumulating, construction costs are rising and offsite approaches are being encouraged at policy levels to increase productivity in construction. For prefabrication and industrialized building systems more specifically to be adopted and work on all cylindersdemand must be systematized as a streamlined pipeline of similar types to enable manufacturers’ existing methodologies to be deployed successfully


Innovative application of technologies within the industrialized construction space, panelized or modular is difficult as current project demand, which is required to plan a company's viability are simply not at predictability levels conducive to adopting or investing in production strategies that bolster capacity. Government programs in certain countries are directing initiatives to frame both current and future demand guaranteeing long-term commitments giving manufacturers confirmation that any investments will not be in vain; stability encourages both growth and technological reform.


For the manufactured housing sector this type of secure demand is critical as profitable fabrication of homes in a factory is based on continuous supply chains and normalized requirements. Promoting specific building systems like modular volumetric building with stacked standardized units has proven challenging as in the single-family dwelling market - the sector's bread and butter at least in America - pipelines are articulated to simpler conditions when compared to the collective housing blocks.


Collaboration with professionals, code requirements, energy metrics along with performance criterialogistics and project management in dense urban areas are just a few conditions that showcase collective blocks complexities in relation to business models derived from single-family dwellings. Without predictable orders that provide the capacity to study, implement and deploy integrated manufacturing processes, most companies lack the financial robustness and resilience to support fragmented project orders. Automation in particular has been difficult to implement, at scale, in housing manufacturing where demand doesn’t justify substantial upfront investments


Pipelines for conventional construction are developed on a project-by-project basis and are not conceived for scale. They are geared toward an imagined / perceived bespoke quality. Successful application of industrialized construction points to a reformed model of mass production where stability in demand supports a customizable uniqueness through scalable systems.


Toyota Homes factory production - capacity of 5000 units per year


Thursday, June 4, 2026

Prefabrication experiments - 515 - What is Modular?

 

The diverse vocabulary associated with offsite construction can sometimes fog what is meant by «modular». Today, Offsite construction has been popularized, but the term is often used interchangeably with modern methods of constructionmanufactured housingprefabricationindustrialized building or modular, all refer to similar yet distinct concepts. Modular as a generic term should always be specified in relation to what is produced, a 2D panel, a 3D volume or a linear element can all be modular in the sense that their dimensions inform how they are either transported or how they contribute to shaping a larger whole.

 

In this sense modular volumetric construction would be the correct term for building with large boxes produced in a factory determined by transport criteria, then lifted and stacked into place. Modular volumetric can be deployed for a whole building composed of many megablocks, or to prefabricate complex parts; service cores or pods can be manufactured and inserted into an open framework.

 

With much of the work completed in the factory - up to 90% in certain cases - this formidable building strategy can go up quickly to reduce project timelines and when part of a scalable mass-production strategy could contribute to reducing construction costs. 

 

While the advantages are clear, building large chunks of a building in a factory requires a shift in planning as all project parameters must be determined and harmonized for the factory long before it’s required for a conventional onsite build. The traditional onsite process is linear with all building systems added onsite as required. Modular volumetric building begins either before or concurrently to site work and once elements are produced and brought to site, there is little room (no room) for change - or in the worst case, adapting to new site conditions interrupts factory production. Upfront planning can be seen as an advantage but is often identified as a barrier. Modular volumetric units are planned down to their most seemingly insignificant details with harmonized supply chains epitomizing manufacturing methodologies applied to building, thereby upsetting traditional paradigms. 


Modular components and subassemblies


Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Prefabrication experiments - 514 - Cooperation - advantage or inconvenience


 

The advantages of offsite construction are chiefly articulated to preparing components in advance of their use in a controlled setting for their subsequent delivery and assembly on site. Preparing sub-assemblies in a factory leads to potential gains in quality as acknowledged impediments to conventional construction are mitigated: climate, health and safety hazards, supply chain tuning and greater collaboration between designers and producers. This last aspect is often cited as a challenge to increased uptake in offsite construction, which relates to how comfortable the construction sector has become with the entangled mess that is onsite building. 

 

Cooperation between trades, design professionals, general contractors and manufacturers generally leads to better projects whether on or offsite built. However, when it comes to producing elements in a factory this close cooperation is necessary to ensure a streamlined chain of decisions that overlaps with conditions that are proceeding onsite. These conditions become difficult to adapt to with a manufacturing process if site situations change from those initially planned.

  

Integrated project teams or even design-build teams are more conducive to onsite/offsite cooperation as they provide the upfront planning and collaboration required to ensure that all technical aspects are precisely coordinated before the project begins. Mistakes and errors in factory production arise but can be corrected in the factory before sending parts out to the field; however discrepancies between field conditions and production are extremely costly to repair onsite and can lead to long work stoppages and cost overruns. 

 

While the intensive planning and collaboration phase can be time consuming when evaluated against the conventional design-bid-build process, it should not be seen as a challenge but as an opportunity to achieve much higher quality reducing wasteful onsite adaptations.

 

Generally, the type of necessary cooperation can be maintained by keeping lines of communication open between all parties and sharing proper documentation and shop drawings that detail elements that will be delivered to the field along with their required stitching details. Digital virtual modelling can certainly facilitate this process but it’s not a panacea and must be accompanied by adequate and continuous communication between all parties involved.

 

Off-site and On-site logistics from Zhang, C., Jiang, J., Xia, C. et al. Dual-objective optimization of prefabricated component logistics based on JIT strategy. Sci Rep 14, 31267 (2024). 


Thursday, May 21, 2026

Prefabrication experiments - 513 - Junior Trelement industrialized building system

 

The endless battle of standardization versus customization, a longstanding obstacle stinting the uptake of industrialized construction, has often guided the conception and promotion of open systems capable of bridging the conceptual gap between a cost-effective required seriality and ingrained configurational agility. Design flexibility becomes an advantage and a selling point for the commercialization of these industrialized construction systems as demonstrated by Alco Germany's Junior Trelement kit of aluminum pieces, patterned on adaptable grids implemented in one-story facilities, first in Germany and then throughout Europe. 

 

Advertisements and the published product catalogue describe the early-1970s platform as a solution for personalized affordable manufactured architecture for everything from schools to office buildings and to single-family dwellings. The system's aluminum frame was regulated by a triangular grid, with connecting beams forming a hexagon geometry of roof joists attached to a six-pronged plate; this configuration shaped the basic polygonal composition. Available in rectangular as well as the triangular arrangement described above, the Junior Trelement structure spanned approximately 5 meters. In the triangular version - each equilateral module had a segment length of 2,3 or 2,5 meters. The intersection plate at maximum spans sat on an aluminum column or post whose cross section mirrored the connector's star shape.

 

Ideally suited to single-storey buildings, the Trelement horizontal plane roof could be tessellated to create coverings of any shape and size. Still marketed today, the company also promotes an after-sales service for existing buildings constructed with the system - foregrounding the advantage of repairability and replacement of existing parts. 

 

This type of systemic circularity is embedded in Trelement's DNA as well as its aluminum parts. Marginally applied in buildings due to fire constraints, aluminum's malleability specifically its capacity to be extruded in very precise shapes or profiles - makes it an ideal material for this type of time-based adaptability as elements can be put together and disassembled multiple times without fatiguing. Further each piece is theoretically interchangeable with those of any other building made of the same components, establishing a potential trading network of Trelement parts harvested from disused, disassembled buildings. 


Alco's Junior Trelement System


Thursday, May 14, 2026

Prefabrication experiments - 512 - A prefab «sweet spot»

 

Growing global interest in prefab raises interesting questions for its future development: do systems define an era, or do eras inform a need that breeds a particular system? Light timber framing for low-density residential construction, heavy centralized panelized precast concrete to rebuild Europe, and integrated modular volumetric systems, known as MIC (modular integrated construction) in various contexts recount and symbolize a period's dominant framework for streamlining building construction with manufacturing. Mobile homes or steel skeletons for industrial hangars have somewhat less generalized histories but are equally emblematic. Today, comprehensive factory production remains elusive, but building culture is overwhelmingly mass-produced and standardized, attuned to materials and methods that are aligned with an onsite/offsite sweet spot. 

 

The mechanized sawmill in the US which led to balloon framing, required fireproofing for dense urban architecture in Europe generated patents for the reinforced concrete flat slab system, and panelization in particular illustrate success stories of Industrialized building systems balancing strategies with project functions, scales and socio-economic criteria: timber panels have been massively adopted to accelerate construction. Integrated (closed) panels or structural frames (open panels), for walls, floors, and roofs reduce sitework and waste without the predetermined architectural language associated with modular volumetric or comprehensive proprietary factory production. Their variability is an asset; architects can design any configuration that is translated as «panelized», produced as flat-packed building surfaces, delivered just-in-time, and assembled in an orchestrated sequence to facilitate construction management.

 

The adoption of this type of prefab for single family as well as multi-unit residential construction up to a regulated maximum of six stories (in Canada) showcases the industry's capacity to auto-regulate and adjust to technologies that can be introduced into construction's fragmented process without substantially altering it. Kitchen cabinetry, modular roof truss frames, prefabricated cladding systems, precast architectural panels, and curtainwalls all represent a similar manufacturing «sweet spot» suited to a traditional construction process: a seemingly seamless coordinated  on and off site production process applying rigorous manufacturing criteria, assembly details, and principles – examples of DfMA applied to buildings. 

 

The construction industry evolves slowly, with ingrained challenges related to productivity, transparency, and trade entanglement. However, panelization shows the sector’s ability to integrate nimble strategies that hit a sweet spot where advantages for design and fabrication become obvious to all stakeholders.


open (left) versus closed (right) panels


Friday, May 8, 2026

Prefabrication experiments - 511 - Design for Disassembly Before its Time - Jean Prouvé's Maisons démontables


 The confluence of military rigour applied to construction management, design methodologies and generational investments in housing encouraged inventivity in building systems. Manufacturing advances outpaced onsite construction producing a myriad of components for the rapid erection of diverse building types. This spirit of production for assembly spawned new experiments and their foundational industrious professional practises. Further, materials as well as methods associated with war efforts and their subsequent transfer to civilian use supported an integrated industrial design process applied to architecture, foreshadowing DfMA approaches promoted today.

 

Metalworker and self-taught industrial designer/architect Jean Prouvé’s work personified this generative triad of crisis, industrialization and the impulse for manufacturing in architecture. Responding to postwar government mandates, Prouvé developed a series of service core houses «for better days». His vision for the serial production of houses steered Prouvé to design and fabricate building kits with dimensionally coordinated metal parts for structural frames infilled with glass and timber panels in a type of multifunctional curtain wall system.

 

Included in a highly productive career, Prouvé explored the theory of demountable buildings arguing for an open-source architecture that could be mass produced. Articulated to his 1-meter grid, the demountable building kits integrated a mature approach for scalability linked to part interchangeability; with pieces, details, assemblies and repetitive patterns for overall systems harmonized for simple arrangements. From his 4x4-meter military shelter designed first as an armed forces or emergency dwelling and then as a leisure unit for a budding post-war prosperity to examples designed for their disassembly developed for specific functions, the reversible elements could feasibly be used, reused or repurposed for the repair and replacement of parts. 

 

These early discussions around flexibility and adaptability evolved into contemporary strategies for circularity, component standardisation, and optimizations for interoperability. The simplicity of Prouvé’s demountable structures would not be as straightforward in today’s performative and normative building culture, however the underlying ideas are certainly being revived as our contemporary crises call for action to reform how the built environment is produced, managed and repurposed. 


An example of the Demountable Houses


Thursday, April 30, 2026

Prefabrication experiments - 510 - Modern Industrialized and Practical Kitchens - a modular success story

 

As the practicality of gas and electricity replaced wood and coal as fuels for cooking and heating in homes, kitchens were transformed into multifunctional and cleaner areas, becoming the locus of social life. Further, these conveniences reduced spaces for wood storage, made cooking consistent and increased time for leisure. The kitchen also benefitted from advances in technology and mass-produced appliances. The Bauhaus Kitchen of Haus am Horn (1923) and The Frankfurt Kitchen (1926) designed by Grete Schütte-Lihotsky and built-into many of Ernst May's mass housing projects improved ergonomics and foreshadowed postwar comforts. 

 

In 1933 Bruynzeel Kitchens founded in the Netherlands, drawing on a longstanding experience in furniture manufacturing, reformed kitchen design with their prefabricated coffers. The modular cabinets could be juxtaposed to create various cabinet configurations, introducing early mass customization that would become the predominant business model in kitchen design. 

 

Post-World War II technological dissemination simplified hardware, made electrical appliances the norm, introduced cheaper materials and production methods, and defined what would become the mid-century modern kitchen, conceived to facilitate everything from storage to preparation. USDA (the United States Department of Agriculture) idealized these facilities and packed them into a 1949 film: The Step Saving Kitchen. Linked below the film pitched to middle-class homemakers, spawned fantasies about the latest design features, commodifying the kitchen as home’s powerful engine requiring spinning shelves, hide-away compartments, and integrated garbage disposals.

 

Democratization initiated in the 1920s laboratory work-kitchen and promotion of consumerism like the 1949 film still underline most kitchen designs. In the 1980s, Ikea took Bruynzeel’s model and perfected it with their own DIY culture articulating kitchen design to their prefab caissons manipulated on digital configurators empowering anyone to predetermine their own kitchens equipped with enumerable cabinet types, fixtures and utensils. Today, the variable assembly of modular caissons remains the accepted model for producing personalized kitchens. Many companies offer similar approaches or preconceived models that can be either panelized, modularized or packed, protected and delivered to be plugged into any coordinated space; making the kitchen probably the most successful offsite-built system in the history of prefabrication.


Link to the film 



 

 

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Prefabrication experiments - 509 - Loft-Liner, the split-level mobile home

 

The mobile home has come up regularly in this blog, and while it’s certainly not a model of building industrialization most pursue today, we have tried to objectively portray its successes as well as its failures, and sometimes even its follies. Mobile homes have a somewhat complex relationship with prefabrication, as they are often blamed for a generalized lack of uptake. In the manufactured home sector, negative connotations led to evolving vocabulary to relinquish links to assembly-line lightweight timber boxes produced at a time when regulatory frameworks were nascent and normalization not sufficiently developed.

 

The history of mobile home construction is filled with all manner of peculiar ideas to bring affordable dwellings to the masses. Elmer Frey of Milwaukee's Marshfield Homes, a well-known pioneer in the industry, even stacked mobile homes to showcase their evolving potentials (see blog no. 211). Frey is also credited with advocating for reform in transport bylaws and permitting for wider models. Rather than stacking or making wider models, another mobile home forerunner chose to integrate a second floor to increase flexibility of these houses on wheels. Founder and model designer, Myron Poole of the Holan Engineering Company explored 2-storey split-level-inspired designs and applied for the Loft-Liner trademark in 1954.

 

Holan Engineering Co and then its subsequent subsidiary Ventoura Homes marketed these trailers as packing the same amount of livable space and amenities as was possible in a much longer and difficult to tow 50-foot mobile homes. With a standard single-wide width the Loft-Liner evoked affordable suburban living and was sold in three lengths: 38, 40 and 46 feet, each with options for one bedroom on the first floor and a second on the upper floor adjacent to extra storage space. The company sold thousands of Loft-liners with an upper level which would prove difficult to tug around with today's height restrictions, but the 1950s allowed these behemoths to travel freely to mobile home parks and displaced according to a family’s needs and economic conditions.


Loft-Liner advertisement


Thursday, April 16, 2026

Prefabrication experiments - 508 - Natural Pavilion


Associated with authors and researchers N. John Habraken (Supports and Infill) and Stewart Brand (How Buildings Learn), adaptability includes strategies that facilitate a building's evolution and its functional changes over time; converted to new needs, uses or simply to be renewed with replacement parts as needed. Material circularity principles take this one step further as architecture is conceived and produced to be completely dismantled into its constituent components and potentially delivered as a kit to a new site and toward multiple service lives.  

 

From individualized fit-out (Habraken) and systemic autonomous layering (Brand), both proposed design solutions framed by their permanence: long-term durability for infrastructure and at the other end of the spectrum easy to replace and redesign elements for short-lived banalities. These strategies outline «open building» theories that have been and continue to be explored most proficiently in the Netherlands. 

 

The 1000-square-meter Natural Pavilion test structure assembled in 2022, designed by dp6 architectuurstudio in the city of Almere, well-known for its architectural prototypes, combines an «open» modular timber framework with bio-sourced and recycled materials. The structural platform frame is completed with CLT floor plates. Wall panels and other flexible infill elements include bio-based or recycled materials along with reused plate glass elements harvested from buildings that no longer required them; all elements are dimensionally coordinated to create many possible configurations 

 

The structural frame is based on an analogous principle to shipping containers where standardized connectors facilitate stacking 3x3x3m cubes composed of similarly profiled posts and beams. Three-faced heavy-duty moment connector plates fixed to the end of each timber member constitute the vertices of the off-site or on-site prefabricated modular volumes. The built-up perimeters of these open box frames are then simply bolted together at the plates' extending intersections. Steel bars are placed diagonally as needed to brace certain faces against lateral loads.The steel connectors have a furniture-scale quality, like those used in standard modular shelving.  

 

In opposition to the seamless continuity, we have come to expect from our modern building interiors, this pavilion shows the cultural leap required for the design-for-disassembly approach to be more than just another pipe dream in the history of adaptable prefabrication.


Modular open frame boxes designed for disassembly