There are still hurdles to overcome, but prefabrication techniques are steadily becoming more viable and widespread, as Building Teams realize the potential for labor, schedule, and even cost savings.
In order to receive the full benefits of designing and building with prefabrication techniques, such as bathroom pods, AEC firms should eye projects with repetitive layouts—hotels, student residence halls, in-patient towers, etc. “The more repetition, the more value there is in prefabricating,” says Ray Rigsby, Project Executive with Gilbane Building Co. “Any facility type that has repetitive floor plans lends itself to prefabrication.”
Bathrooms are a particularly good fit for prefabricated construction. Commercial projects such as hotels and student housing typically require large numbers of bathroom units with little or no variation unit to unit. And because bathroom dimensions meet road trucking size limits, the finished product can be shipped to the project site without having to be broken down into multiple components and reassembled on the job site.
(SEE ALSO: New white paper on modular bathroom pods offers insight on best uses)
Bathroom pods have also emerged as a pro tem solution to the construction industry’s ongoing labor shortage. “As a country, we have 1.5 million fewer trades people today than we did in 2007, when we had a similar level of construction activity going on,” says Bill Seery, Managing Director, Oldcastle SurePods, a bathroom pod manufacturer. “This is a structural change in the U.S. construction industry that is never going to go away.”
Rigsby agrees with this sentiment and believes prefabrication provides an answer. “The construction workforce is getting older, there are fewer workers coming into the trades, and there is an overall push to reduce labor costs,” he says. “Prefabrication will be used to offset this trend and in markets that are saturated with work to help offset a lack of workers.”
Bathroom pods are moved into position at the Seattle Embassy Suites. Jeff Beck, Courtesy Oldcaste SurePods.
Maximizing the Power of Pods
In order to optimize bathroom pods for a given project, the pods need to be incorporated into the design process early—no later than design documents, says Seery. Determine the pod details early—“Reworking details defeats the purpose of prefabrication,” says Rigsby—and start planning with a solid understanding of what the final product will be.
Rigsby and Seery offer additional tips and advice based on their decade-plus career working with prefab construction methods:
- All bathrooms should be the same size and shape. Any slight deviation, other than finishes, requires a new pod template.
- Ensure pod sizes are reflected correctly in the framing details.
- The pod supplier, architect, and contractor should perform a BIM conflict analysis to ensure there are no MEP clashes.
- Factor in site storage options and installation paths for the pods during preconstruction planning. Consider issues related to access to each floor level to allow rigging of the pods.
- Designers should consider the interface between the top of the pod and the ceiling structure to avoid any gaps or misalignment of utilities.
- Make sure all necessary connection points are accessible from the outside.
- Once installed, ensure the pod is squared and plumbed.
The more planning that goes into incorporating bathroom pods, the more beneficial they will be. Based on research and client feedback, Seery estimates that bathroom pods accelerate projects by roughly two months on average.
Rigsby says bathroom pods can also improve quality compared to traditional construction. “The quality control is better, and there are fewer varying conditions in the field and less day-to-day worker variation,” he says.
The 282-room hotel is scheduled to open this summer. Jeff Beck, courtesy Oldcaste SurePods.
evolution of the bathroom pod
A decade ago, bathroom pods were constructed with basically the same process as field-built bathrooms, just in a factory setting. Since that time, however, the process has been refined and streamlined.
“We now work natively in Revit for BIM, so we can provide pod models for the architect to drop directly into their building model,” says Seery. “Our Revit models translate directly into machine code for our production robots to produce many of our production pieces, which reduces labor and provides better overall tolerances and accuracy for the pods.”
The products used within the pods have also evolved and improved. SurePods, for example, has created a patent-pending, fully water- and crack-proof ceiling assembly that offers a five-year, no-crack warranty.
Increasingly sophisticated finishes and detailing have expanded the applications for bathroom pods, from suite apartments and dormitories to five-star hotels with complex, five-fixture setups.
“When we started in 2004, the technology to fully automate part of the design-to-manufacturing process did not exist,” says Seery, “nor did some of the more progressive materials we use today.”
The project’s developer estimates that the use of bathroom pods shaved two months off of the construction schedule. Jeff Beck, courtesy Oldcaste SurePods.
Related Stories
| Jul 10, 2013
World's best new skyscrapers [slideshow]
The Bow in Calgary and CCTV Headquarters in Beijing are among the world's best new high-rise projects, according to the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat.
High-rise Construction | Jul 9, 2013
5 innovations in high-rise building design
KONE's carbon-fiber hoisting technology and the Broad Group's prefab construction process are among the breakthroughs named 2013 Innovation Award winners by the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat.
Sponsored | | Jun 30, 2013
Get your 'Early Bird' entry in for BD+C 30th Annual Reconstruction Awards
The deadline is for BD+C's 30th Annual Reconstruction Awards is July 19, but if you get me a draft of your entry by July 12 (earlier if possible, please!), we'll read it and give you feedback and suggestions that could help you win. We'll give you enough time to rework your entry in time to meet the deadline. We do this "Early Bird" service to help you put together the best possible entry - one that will answer any questions our distinguished jury members may come up with. However, we must emphasize that the BD+C Reconstruction Awards program is a juried competition, so there are no guarantees you'll win. We're just trying to improve your odds. Building Design+Construction is the only publication in its field to recognize the importance of reconstruction in all its forms - historic preservation, adaptive reuse, renovation, fitouts, and reconstruction with addition. And we've been doing it for 30 years. Incidentally, reconstruction accounts for 30-35% of all revenue for AEC firms, so it's a key component of the US/Canada design and construction industry. Send your draft entry to: rcassidy@sgcmail.com. And good luck!
| Jun 28, 2013
Calculating the ROI of building enclosure commissioning
A researcher at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory calls building enclosure commissioning “the single-most cost-effective strategy for reducing energy, costs, and greenhouse gas emissions in buildings today.”
| Jun 28, 2013
A brief history of windows in America
Historic window experts from Hoffmann Architects look back at the origin of windows in the U.S.
| Jun 28, 2013
Building owners cite BIM/VDC as 'most exciting trend' in facilities management, says Mortenson report
A recent survey of more than 60 building owners and facility management professionals by Mortenson Construction shows that BIM/VDC is top of mind among owner professionals.
| Jun 27, 2013
Thermal, solar control designs can impact cooling loads by 200%, heating loads by 30%
Underestimating thermal bridging can greatly undermine a building’s performance contributing to heating load variances of up to 30% and cooling load variances of up to 200%, says the MMM Group.
| Jun 20, 2013
Virtual meetings enhance design of University at Buffalo Medical School
HOK designers in New York, St. Louis and Atlanta are using virtual meetings with their University at Buffalo (UB) client team to improve the design process for UB’s new School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences on the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus.
| Jun 14, 2013
Purdue, industry partners test light steel framing for seismic safety
A partnership of leading earthquake engineering researchers from top U.S. and Canadian universities and design professionals from the steel industry have begun the final phase of a three-year project to increase the seismic safety of buildings that use lightweight cold-formed steel for their primary beams and columns.
| Jun 11, 2013
Finnish elevator technology could facilitate supertall building design
KONE Corporation has announced a new elevator technology that could make it possible for supertall buildings to reach new heights by eliminating several problems of existing elevator technology. The firm's new UltraRope hoisting system uses a rope with a carbon-fiber core and high-friction coating, rather than conventional steel rope.