TY - CONF TI - Exploring Offsite Construction for the Construction Sector: A Literature Review C1 - Lille, France C3 - Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the International Group for Lean Construction (IGLC31) SP - 735 EP - 745 PY - 2023 DO - 10.24928/2023/0132 AU - Broadhead, James P. AU - Daniel, Emmanuel I. AU - Oshodi, Olalekan AU - Ahmed, Sa’id AD - Managing Director, Offsite Focus Consulting, Canada. Orcid.org/0000-0002-3528-4176 james@offsitefocus.com AD - Senior Lecturer in Construction Management, School of Architecture and Built Environment, Faculty of Science and Engineering., University of Wolverhampton, Wolverhampton, UK, e.daniel2@wlv.ac.uk, orcid.org/0000- 0002-5675-1845 AD - Senior Lecturer in Construction Project Management, School of Engineering and Built Environment, Anglia Ruskin, University, United Kingdom. olalekan.oshodi@aru.ac.uk, orcid.org/0000-0001-6106-7717 AD - Lecturer, School of Engineering and the Environment, Department of Civil Engineering, Surveying and Construction Management, Kingston University: London, Greater London, GB. s.ahmed@kingston.ac.uk, orcid.org/0000-0002-3815-0683 AB - The construction sector is one of the largest producers of Gross Domestic Product globally and yet has shown little innovation in the last 20 years. Offsite has been touted as cheaper, faster, higher in quality and more environmentally friendly than onsite construction. The purpose of this paper is to review the current research into offsite construction and determine the barriers to adoption and benefits facing offsite construction. A systematic literature review was undertaken to gather relevant knowledge surrounding the subject matter using a database search of Scopus. It was found that knowledge was the largest barrier to adoption and that transcended multiple stakeholders, from the selection of the appropriate delivery methodology, how to design for optimized fabrication and finally how to interface with the onsite requirements. The benefits are a higher build quality, shorter project duration as both site work and fabrication occur at the same time, improved safety, and less material wastage. The Barriers come from design freezes earlier in the process and inflexible design for customization later in the build. KW - Off-site construction KW - modular construction KW - prefabrication KW - advantages KW - disadvantages PB - T2 - Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the International Group for Lean Construction (IGLC31) DA - 2023/06/26 CY - Lille, France L1 - http://iglc.net/Papers/Details/2075/pdf L2 - http://iglc.net/Papers/Details/2075 N1 - Export Date: 19 April 2025 DB - IGLC.net DP - IGLC LA - English ER -