Skip to: Curated Story Group 1
Visually Open Nav.
US
APAC
EUROPE
subscribe
Home
Sections
Sections
Architectural Glass
Building Restoration and Maintenance
Commercial Contractors
Concretes, Aggregates and Construction Materials
Construction Cladding
Construction Consulting
Construction Engineering Services
Construction Equipment
Construction Forensic and Owners Representative
Construction Insulation, Coating and Waterproofing
Construction Interiors
Construction Staffing
Doors and windows
Flooring System
HVAC
Kitchen and Bath
Mechanical Electrical and Plumbing
Modular and Prefab Construction
Outdoor Construction
Pre-Construction Services
Residential Construction
Roofing and Siding Systems
Specialty Construction
Wall Systems
Contributors
Vendors
News
Conferences
Newsletter
About
Awards
Welcome back to this new edition of Construction Business Review !!!
✖
Sign In
Subscribe to our Weekly Newsletter to get latest updates to your inbox
AUGUST - 2023CONSTRUCTIONBUSINESSREVIEW.COM8By Daniel Cole, PMP, Senior Project Manager, Aldridge Electric, Inc.PREFABRICATION, MODELLING, AND THE MODULAR FUTURE OF ELECTRICAL AND INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS IN CONSTRUCTION While prefabrication has been the buzzword in construction for quite some time now, the implementation and scale of this philosophy have only more re-cently begun to be realized. With regards to the electrical and Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) industries specifically, this area has seen explosive real growth in recent years and the future looks to capitalize even more on this trend. Where We've Been The early days of the prefabrication trend in outdoor lighting and electrical were more a model of leveraging supplier and vendor capabilities than any real, all-encompassing strategy to reimagine project delivery. Suppliers began to offer lights as a "kit" in which the wire was precut and labelled according to the project documents, saving the installer only minimal time in the field. While vendor/supplier capabilities were constrained by the complexities of varying projects and the skill and manpower necessary to truly highlight the possibilities of prefabrication, contractors themselves have, in recent years, taken the ball and run. Where We Are Having the door opened by way of wire "kitting" and prepopulated and fitted boxes for specific applications, contractors began to see and expand on the possibilities that prefabrication could deliver. Within a matter of years, prefab scopes had grown from kitting and assemblies to entire stretches of duct bank and raceway, sometimes miles long. In-house, prefabrication operations grew from a few field workers to entire warehouses and production facilities. The list of benefits grew from minor time savings IN MYOPINION
<
Page 7
|
Page 9
>