Consolidating loads for sustainable construction in New Zealand: a literature review-based research framework
Auteur(s): |
Kamal Dhawan
John Tookey Ali GhaffarianHoseini Amirhosein GhaffarianHoseini |
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Médium: | article de revue |
Langue(s): | anglais |
Publié dans: | Smart and Sustainable Built Environment, juillet 2022, n. 2, v. 11 |
Page(s): | 313-333 |
DOI: | 10.1108/sasbe-08-2021-0151 |
Abstrait: |
PurposeA long-term collaborative public water infrastructure procurement contract in New Zealand adopts “Enterprise Alliance” delivery (strategy) with a Construction Consolidation Centre (CCC) (operational) logistics solution. New Zealand's unique spatial, market, regulatory and economic circumstances present a research gap pertaining to the sustainability impacts of the combinatory implementation. The paper suggests a literature review-based research framework for examining these. Design/methodology/approachSystematic literature review (SLR) discovers unique New Zealand attributes, and sustainability impacts of both the approaches overseas. Towards formulating a research framework, the paper discusses sustainability of construction and its New Zealand context, and research focus within the implemented model. Significant issues from SLR reveal Design, Logistics, Impacts and Spin-offs research domains. The paper suggests a research framework and examines an appropriate research design. FindingsCCC implementation under a programme alliance is without precedent in New Zealand. Variance of New Zealand's unique attributes from North American and European characteristics behind successful implementation are likely to impact domestic outcomes. A research framework to test this hypothesis will enable investigating the relevance of the concepts to New Zealand settings and provide a contextual implementation datum. Implementation benchmarks will potentially influence public policy and enrich indigenous knowledge corpus, potentially transferrable to associated domains (urban planning, transportation and energy). Originality/valueThe paper attempts to define a research direction in the domain of applying supply chain management principles to the New Zealand's construction sector by investigating the employment of a CCC in a collaborative environment as an infrastructure project delivery vehicle with sustainability leanings. |
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10779721 - Publié(e) le:
12.05.2024 - Modifié(e) le:
12.05.2024