Design to Value: facilitating a critical, creative, people focused approach with process engineering and digital construction technology
The components that make up the built solution can be mass produced by existing manufacturing supply chains.
We've seen the benefits they deliver..Using the same concept to enable advanced and automated design will only multiply those benefits.. To learn more about our Design to Value approach, sign up for our monthly newsletter here:.
http://bit.ly/BWNewsUpdatesClick the 'play button' above to listen to this Built Environment Matters podcast episode featuring.Jaimie Johnston MBE., or read our 5 Key Takeaways from this episode below.... 1.. Industrialised Construction is no longer optional.
Amy and Jaimie emphasised that the shift towards industrialised construction is not just a trend—it’s a necessity.With growing pressures from sustainability goals, workforce challenges, and cost efficiency demands, traditional construction methods are proving inadequate.
The conversation highlighted how industrialised processes, including productisation and Design for Manufacture and Assembly (DfMA), are essential for addressing these challenges and meeting future demands.. 2.. Productisation is the next frontier.
The discussion introduced the concept of.The world is far off track when it comes to meeting the Paris Agreement goals of limiting the global temperature increase to 1.5˚C by 2050.. 2.
Current projections, even those that include vast expansion of renewable energy generation, show that fossil fuels will still make up the majority of world energy use by the middle of this century.This would result in a failure to adequately decarbonise, and put us on course for a high-risk 4˚C outcome, which could lead to substantial areas of the planet becoming uninhabitable.
According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), in order to meet that limit of 1.5˚C, human-generated CO2 emissions must be cut in half by 2030 and reach net zero by 2050.Decarbonising is essential..