Reasons for Optimism: Building Connections for a Positive Future | The Dyson Blog

LoRaWAN is a long-range, wide-area network on a different frequency band to WiFi.

(traditional and alternative structures)., but rather the choices we make upfront relating to the design, manufacture and assembly process..

Reasons for Optimism: Building Connections for a Positive Future | The Dyson Blog

There isn’t a hierarchy with any of this, she says, mentioning the term ‘modular’ construction.Each industrialised construction technique is just another tool in the toolkit, with varying degrees of suitability depending on the particular scenario.. She also raises the point that some people feel threatened by the industrialised construction terminology, as a result of not having the necessary skill set.As a result, they become very opposed.

Reasons for Optimism: Building Connections for a Positive Future | The Dyson Blog

This presents an additional challenge.. Marks says it’s particularly problematic due to the siloed nature of the ecosystem.She doesn’t want the language of industrialised construction to hold anyone back, or create barriers, and feels it’s simply a matter of adapting and changing a few behaviors.. Prioritising Design to Value with lean construction principles.

Reasons for Optimism: Building Connections for a Positive Future | The Dyson Blog

Jaimie Johnston recognises that people are becoming bogged down in the granularity of the words, even with terms like ‘on-site’ and ‘off-site.’.

The important thing is to fully understand the outcomes clients are aiming to achieve, he says, be it speed, greatest flexibility, or lowest costs.This will also mean the capital cost should come down and certainly the running costs will decrease.

Ultimately, you will have a happy client who won’t have to pay as much to run the building every year.With the Circle Reading project, architects Bryden Wood have employed a design ethic powered by both clinical practicality and build efficiency, delivering a hospital not only visually distinctive, but one which utilises insightful, use-driven design and cutting edge manufacturing processes.It’s a space which continually upends expectations - a structure of steel and concrete, much of which was built offsite..

The achievement has been made possible by the implementation of a bespoke Design for Manufacture and Assembly system, which Bryden Wood developed in conjunction with Circle and tailored specifically for their needs.Ultimately, the system played a key role in the creation of Adaptable Platforms.