11 Evaluating the current state of digitalisation of the UK construction industry
-
Liam Bousfield
, Serik Tokbolat and Peter Demian
Abstract
Due to the significant role of the construction industry in terms of the impact on economies and the environment, digitalisation of this sphere deserves special attention. This study aims to evaluate the state of digitalisation of the UK construction industry from the perspective of construction professionals. A critical review of existing literature is conducted to identify and evaluate the (1) barriers to adoption and implementation of digital practices, (2) the gap in adoption between small and medium enterprises and large-sized companies, (3) currently available, and (4) future technologies. The findings of the literature review were further investigated by adopting the mixed method approach, combining qualitative and quantitative research methods to develop a comprehensive understanding of the digitalisation phenomena in the context of the UK construction industry. In total, 81 questionnaire responses were returned and 5 interviews were conducted to gauge the opinions of construction professionals. The results reveal how there have been minimal advancements, in line with prior predictions, and how there is still considerable room for improvement to digitalise the industry. The study is an up-to-date snap shot of the current reality in the field of construction digitalisation in the UK and therefore provides the actual picture of the current state of affairs that could be useful for the industry as a whole.
Abstract
Due to the significant role of the construction industry in terms of the impact on economies and the environment, digitalisation of this sphere deserves special attention. This study aims to evaluate the state of digitalisation of the UK construction industry from the perspective of construction professionals. A critical review of existing literature is conducted to identify and evaluate the (1) barriers to adoption and implementation of digital practices, (2) the gap in adoption between small and medium enterprises and large-sized companies, (3) currently available, and (4) future technologies. The findings of the literature review were further investigated by adopting the mixed method approach, combining qualitative and quantitative research methods to develop a comprehensive understanding of the digitalisation phenomena in the context of the UK construction industry. In total, 81 questionnaire responses were returned and 5 interviews were conducted to gauge the opinions of construction professionals. The results reveal how there have been minimal advancements, in line with prior predictions, and how there is still considerable room for improvement to digitalise the industry. The study is an up-to-date snap shot of the current reality in the field of construction digitalisation in the UK and therefore provides the actual picture of the current state of affairs that could be useful for the industry as a whole.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Preface V
- Contents VII
- Editors’ short biography IX
- 1 Seismic site investigation and structural amplification based on geotechnical and structural health monitoring 1
- 2 Impact of industry 4.0 technologies on structural health monitoring 29
- 3 Health monitoring of recycled aggregates-reinforced concrete beams retrofitted by concrete jacket using piezoelectric transducers 63
- 4 Identification of critical response of bilinear-hysteretic SDOF model with tuned inertial mass damper under long-duration ground motion through internal simulation monitoring 79
- 5 Damage identification using physics-based datasets: From convolutional to metric-informed damage-sensitive feature extractors 101
- 6 Structural health monitoring of steel plates using modified modal strain energy indicator and optimization algorithms 125
- 7 Vibration-based damage detection using a novel hybrid CNN-SVM approach 137
- 8 Fast probabilistic damage detection using inverse surrogate models 159
- 9 Remote sensing techniques for post-disaster infrastructure health monitoring 197
- 10 Recent developments in the building information modeling-based programs used for structural and architectural purposes 215
- 11 Evaluating the current state of digitalisation of the UK construction industry 237
- Index 259
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Preface V
- Contents VII
- Editors’ short biography IX
- 1 Seismic site investigation and structural amplification based on geotechnical and structural health monitoring 1
- 2 Impact of industry 4.0 technologies on structural health monitoring 29
- 3 Health monitoring of recycled aggregates-reinforced concrete beams retrofitted by concrete jacket using piezoelectric transducers 63
- 4 Identification of critical response of bilinear-hysteretic SDOF model with tuned inertial mass damper under long-duration ground motion through internal simulation monitoring 79
- 5 Damage identification using physics-based datasets: From convolutional to metric-informed damage-sensitive feature extractors 101
- 6 Structural health monitoring of steel plates using modified modal strain energy indicator and optimization algorithms 125
- 7 Vibration-based damage detection using a novel hybrid CNN-SVM approach 137
- 8 Fast probabilistic damage detection using inverse surrogate models 159
- 9 Remote sensing techniques for post-disaster infrastructure health monitoring 197
- 10 Recent developments in the building information modeling-based programs used for structural and architectural purposes 215
- 11 Evaluating the current state of digitalisation of the UK construction industry 237
- Index 259