What if the efficiencies of automotive manufacturing — car plants with robotics and semi-automated assembly lines — could inspire change in the construction industry?
That’s the kind of question that drives Mohamed Al-Hussein (MASc 95, PhD Eng 99), NSERC Industrial Research Chair (IRC) at the University of Alberta.
The Concordia alum is one of the world’s foremost experts in modular construction — wherein building components are completed off-site (bathrooms for a new hotel, for example) and installed as one finished piece.
With the potential to improve workplace safety, workflow and costs, advocates see modular construction as the way of the future.
“We can learn quite a bit from lean manufacturing, so why not adapt and modify it to fit the housing and building industry?” says Al-Hussein, whose Edmonton-based chair is also funded by private business and the Modular Building Institute, a non-profit trade association based in Charlottesville, Va.
From the Levant to Southeast Europe
After winning a scholarship in the early 1980s, Al-Hussein left his family farm in the Syria to pursue a civil engineering degree in Sofia, Bulgaria.
“That’s where I developed an interest in pre-cast concrete, which was popular at the time,” recalls Al-Hussein. “I then chose Concordia to do my master’s and PhD with Osama Moselhi and Sabah Alkass, specifically because of their reputations.”
Al-Hussein’s graduate research focused on how to select the best kinds of cranes and how to best position cranes on job sites. This drew the attention of Guay Inc., a Quebec-based crane rental company that eventually funded his work.
“This set Mohamed on his path,” says Moselhi, Al-Hussein’s PhD advisor at the Gina Cody School of Engineering and Computer Science. “Cranes are instrumental in modular construction, lifting large pieces into place at job sites. Of course, his work stretches far beyond cranes today. It embraces construction automation, prefabrication of building components and off-site construction.”
Starchitects and prefab pioneers
Al-Hussein has had the opportunity to put his research into practice with the likes of renowned New York architect Steven Holl — whose projects include Beijing’s Linked Hybrid complex and the University of Iowa School of Art and Art History — and New Jersey’s famed Kullman factory, a pre-war pioneer of prefabricated Art Deco diners. He has also worked with a variety of Alberta-based construction firms.
“When my research chair began in 2011, I spent the first five years focusing on productivity and efficiency off-site,” says Al-Hussein. “But now I’m building machines — robotics — that mimic human movement with the goal of a fully-automated production line for things like wood framing, light-gauge steel framing, kitchen-cabinet making and more.”
Al-Hussein helped build several linked three-storey buildings at Muhlenberg College in Pennsylvania in just ten working days. Off-site construction included the creation of 18 large-scale modules, the roofs and a bridge linking each building to the sidewalk.