Off-site construction

Offsite construction refers to the manufacturing, planning, design, fabrication, and assembly of building elements at a location other than their final installed location to support the rapid speed of, and efficient construction of a permanent structure. Such building elements may be prefabricated offsite in a different location and transported to the site or prefabricated on the construction site and then transported to their final location. Offsite construction is characterized by an integrated planning and supply chain optimization strategy. Offsite manufacturing (OSM), offsite production (OSP) and offsite fabrication (OSF) are used when referring primarily to the factory work proper.[1]

Building configurations

Off-site construction (like on-site construction) can be used for a variety of purposes including residential, educational, health care and commercial applications. Buildings can range from a few modular units to several hundred. They can be arranged in architectural configurations and can be many stories in height.

Similarities

Off-site construction is very similar to modular construction, but it is focused primarily on permanent construction; modular construction can be either permanent or relocatable. Also known as offsite construction, or OSC, and also incorporates many MMC - or Modern Methods of Construction technologies.

gollark: Are you sure?
gollark: Oh, I won't accept PRs for your rounding.
gollark: So it didn't work.
gollark: Kit was basically just *guessing* what would work and reading the docs without understanding the horrors of ABR.
gollark: I'll test it myself, yes, but you'll at least have mostly working code.

See also

References

  1. Smith, Ryan (2017). Offsite Architecture. Oxon and New York: Routledge. p. 264. ISBN 978-1-138-82137-8.
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