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In the construction industry,
Design for Manufacture and Assembly (DFMA) involves improving quality through
the application of efficiency.
Finding the most efficient way of
delivering a project reduces the resources required (whether this is measured
in cost, time, carbon, waste or labour) while increasing positive aspects such
as health and safety, quality, certainty. A DFMA solution can be achieved to a
higher quality at lower cost and in less time.
DFMA takes many forms, but the common factor is the
application of factory (or factory-like) conditions to construction projects.
A DFMA solution starts by understanding the end product and
draws upon the range of suppliers and systems available. Varying degrees of
"granularity" can be added according to the project requirements.
Volumetric solutions create as much of the finished product as possible in the
factory, with on-site labour minimised. "Flat pack" or panelised
create a kit of parts that can be quickly assembled on site. Often
prefabricated sub-assemblies (M&E services, for instance) are deployed in
conjunction with more traditional build elements.
For some situations, traditional build elements may be used
but the site is effectively turned into a factory. Pre-packed "fit out
kits" are delivered to the work face with everything needed for the work.
Waste is virtually eliminated, along with the most common causes of delay on
site, i.e. lack of materials, follow-on trades and reworking.
DFMA also allows for buildings to be deconstructed more
safely, with components or even entire buildings able to be reconfigured or
redeployed elsewhere. This is the ultimate form of sustainable construction.
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