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Comparison of modular and traditional UK housing construction: a bibliometric analysis

Authors :
David J. Edwards
Hatem El-Gohary
Mark Shelbourn
Falaq Assad Nazir
Wellington Thwala
Igor Martek
Source :
Journal of Engineering, Design and Technology. 19:164-186
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Emerald, 2020.

Abstract

Purpose Housing completions in the UK have fallen to 125,000 annually, while government targets have risen to 300,000. This dramatic shortfall raises concerns as to whether current traditional construction approaches remain appropriate. This study aims to compare the traditional approach with modular construction, with a view to assessing whether a shift in construction systems offers the potential to alleviate the UK's domestic housing crisis. Design/methodology/approach A comprehensive interpretivist review of the available relevant literature is undertaken on construction methods within the UK; advantages and disadvantages. A bibliometric analysis is conducted to extract trends and findings relevant to the comparison at hand. The database is Web of Science; the analysis software is the VOS viewer. Findings The research illustrates that the UK housing market is in a state of crisis. A toxic combination of a rising UK population combined falling rates of housing delivery has resulted in an ever-widening housing supply gap. The construction industry’s capacity to meet this observed dearth in supply is further exacerbated by a number of chronic factors such as: falling participation in the construction sector workforce; lowering skill levels; reducing profitability; time to delivery pressures; and cost blow-outs. Originality/value While much information on the various construction methods are available, including comparative material, this study is the first to assemble the various comparative parameters regarding traditional and modular UK residential construction in one place. Thus, this study provides a definitive assessment of the relative advantages and disadvantages of these forms of construction.

Details

ISSN :
17260531
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Engineering, Design and Technology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........590c82c540493bad5c97c7bc1c0b403a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1108/jedt-05-2020-0193