Overcoming Skilled Labor Shortages: How Off-site Construction Can Bridge the Gap
It’s no secret that the construction industry is facing a daunting challenge. With tech careers growing in popularity for new graduates, the skilled labor pool for trades has diminished heavily, leaving those in the construction industry overbooked and overworked. In turn, construction prices have skyrocketed, making affordable housing an even bigger challenge.
The possible solution? Off-site construction.
The Construction Labor Shortage
Just how bad is this construction labor shortage? According to ABC.org, “the construction industry will need to attract an estimated 546,000 additional workers on top of the normal pace of hiring in 2023 to meet demand for labor.”
The labor shortage is primarily attributed to several factors.
For starters, 1 in 4 skilled construction workers are older than 55, meaning at least 25% of the construction workforce will be retiring within the next decade. Normally, younger generations would fill in the gaps, but with tech continuing to rise in popularity for careers among new graduates, the construction industry finds itself in an increasingly competitive battle for young talent.
This perfect storm of circumstances has created a pressing need for construction firms to explore alternative methods and strategies to continue meeting the demand for construction services.
The impact on housing has been detrimental and will only worsen.
According to a study by the Home Builders Institute, at least 90% of builders reported a shortage of carpenters and other subcontractors. This shortage has caused labor costs to rise, in turn, making it a challenge to build affordable housing.
While the labor shortage isn’t the sole culprit behind the national housing crisis, it certainly isn’t helping. Housing affordability is currently at a 10-year low and will continue to fall as the construction workforce diminishes.
Luckily, new innovations in the construction industry have already churned up a possible solution.
What is Off-site Construction?
Off-site construction refers to the process of constructing a structure in a different location from the intended final location. This is commonly known as modular construction.
These structures can either be built from a pre-designed plan or custom-designed to the client’s needs. Once a design is finalized, the plans are sent to a factory where a team of builders assemble 95% of the units through a standardized refined process.
After the structures are completed, they’re shipped away to the site where they are installed onto the pre-prepared foundation, and all utilities are connected.
You may have seen these modular units being hauled on the freeway on long flatbed trucks or being craned in your neighborhood. Off-site construction is popular for single-family home construction, but this method of construction has been a big player in large-scale projects for decades, being used to construct anything from 500+ unit apartment complexes to hotels and everything in between.
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Benefits of Off-site Construction
Contrary to what you might think when you hear “factory-built homes”, modular construction holds a vast range of benefits that traditional construction can barely scratch the surface of, especially when it comes to addressing the construction labor shortage. Off-site Construction is Cost-effective
Unlike traditional construction, which often relies heavily on a specialized workforce and training, modular construction uses a standardized process that requires fewer skilled laborers, thus trimming costs significantly. Similar to most factory-built products, modular manufacturers have implemented an assembly line approach, which makes training new hires formulaic and easy.
Material costs, the second largest budget gobbler in construction, are also heavily reduced in offsite construction. Since these factories benefit from economies of scale and can order materials in bulk, they secure significant discounts that are often unattainable for on-site construction projects.
The controlled environment of these factories ensures that materials are stored and handled with precision, minimizing wastage and damage. This combination of bulk purchasing power and material management not only slashes costs but also contributes to the sustainability of construction projects by reducing resource consumption and waste, further solidifying the appeal of offsite construction.
Off-site Construction is More Efficient
In addition to cutting costs, the streamlined factory assembly line process often used in off-site construction also aids in cutting construction time.
Off-site construction is 30-50% faster than traditional construction.
Traditional construction requires the foundation and utility preparations to be completed before any of the actual structures can be started. Almost the entire traditional construction process is linear, which means that one step needs to be completed before the next can begin, elongating the construction timeline.
Using traditional construction, large-scale buildings like apartment complexes can take, on average, seventeen months to complete, and that figure can increase depending on how many units you intend to build in your complex.
Unforeseen circumstances like weather delays will also lengthen the construction timeline with the traditional method.
Clients find that one of the greatest benefits of off-site construction is that site preparation and construction in the factory can be done simultaneously, significantly cutting the timeline of the project by up to twelve months. As the units are completed in a controlled factory environment, weather delays are reduced as well.
Craning in the units takes just a couple of weeks as opposed to the months it would take for traditional construction.
Once the units are all installed, all that’s left is to connect utilities and add the finishing touches. Click here to continue reading on how off-site construction is the solution: https://www.vbc.co/blog/overcoming-skilled-labor-shortages-how-offsite-construction-can-bridge-the-gap
Union Carpenter
10mo"You can “deskill” a task by training someone to do that one task repeatedly on the assembly line." I am a supporter of modular construction as an inportant option. There is a place for everyone out there, but "deskilling" someone sounds like an effective way of demotivating and unempowering someone. Sounds like high turnover could be a possible outcome when one is not challenged or empowered in their work.
Chief Executive Officer at Deal Team USA
11moOff site construction is great, but it does NOT remove the labor, it just moves it to the factory.
Senior Director, Volumetric Building Companies | Driving Innovation in the Construction Sector
11moExcellent article. Shines a light on a very real problem. Similar to the retirement figures for Ireland and UK construction sector with some estimates indicating 25% of the workforce retired by 2030. As with all challenges, this also presents a very real opportunity for the sector to future-proof itself, embracing the opportunities presented by technology, manufacturing and modern methods of design and construction. If addressed strategically and methodically, this challenge could deliver a transformative shift in the sector, enabling companies increase productivity and add value to their clients. All to play for.....
I eliminate the revenue rollercoaster by implementing a proven 5-Step Revenue R.E.C.H.A.R.G.E.R. Framework that creates lasting healthy growth in less than 6 months!
11moGlad to hear about your successful collaboration with VBC. Off-site construction is indeed a promising solution to the labor shortage in the construction industry.
Owner at FourA Constructs
11moGreat article. We are so happy to have been able to help VBC with the labor shortage over the past several years. Looking forward to the continuing relationship!