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// ARTICLE


Modular is the answer, but what is the question?


Historic stigmas oſten hold the construction industry back. What can we learn and how can we learn to instead drive the industry forward? Adam Salt, Head of Global Sales Modular Offsite for A. Proctor Group, looks at expectations around quality in the offsite sector, and the use of measurement techniques as part of wider technical support.


T


he offsite sector has the stigma of high- profile companies struggling due to significant financial challenges. So, it is heartening to also read about success, such as that at Thurston Group, which it reports as being the result of working across multiple sectors and focusing on “offering higher-end modular buildings which are typically more permanent”.


Look at any offsite manufacturing process – be it the size of the facility, the cleanliness, or the care taken in handling and moving modules – and it is clear we’re talking about something that is, and should be seen as, a quality product.


Of course, cost-effectiveness is desirable and will likely be achieved over time via scale. But the modern offsite industry is still relatively nascent and runs into issues when it tries to scale quickly. All of which makes us wonder: is the sector trying to run before it can walk? And does aiming for cheaper hint at a possible misjudgement?


Value engineering and cost saving is a crucial aspect of any business strategy to enhance profitability and remain competitive in the market. Modular and offsite businesses looking to grow in a competitive sector are no different. However, the pursuit of cost savings is not without its risk, and it is important to remember that modular and offsite construction is the answer to our problems.


Beauty is more than skin deep (but first impressions count)


Storage, handling and transportation can all cause damage. The result is modules arriving on site with plastic wrapping or membranes dangling off and flapping around in the wind.


Presentation is key. People want to see something good and instead are presented with a terrible visual that doesn’t represent the quality of the product being handed over.


Wraptite®: a solution that offers more than just protection


Little wonder, then, that companies are going the extra mile to try and avoid negative perceptions.


24 Autumn 2024 M33


We’re seeing more and more companies using products like our self-adhesive Wraptite® membrane to serve not only as the external air barrier, but also as protection for the module during storage and transport.


Occasionally, companies don’t understand the full range of benefits they get from using Wraptite. As well as protection, it offers a simplified external airtightness line that eliminates difficult detailing internally around plug sockets, pipe work and other penetrations. It offers vapour permeability and water hold out too.


Crucially, it is a solution to making any offsite panel or module a product to be proud of when delivering to clients.


Using measurement tools to address challenges when storing completed modules


Quickly reel off the standard list of benefits associated with offsite construction, and it reads something like: better quality, reduced labour, less waste, faster installation.


Faster delivery and installation, however, can mean modules that have been manufactured and then stored. In the UK, there are many examples of offsite factories where modules have nowhere to be stored but outside.


Modules will have moisture that needs to dry out, but shrink-wrapping traps that moisture and can lead to condensation and mould growth in modules. Temporary flat roofs are needed to stop ponding water exerting excessive loads on the modules’ structures.


Numerical simulation of moisture movement and condensation risk is defined in BS EN 15026:2023 Hygrothermal performance of building components and building elements. Assessment of moisture transfer by numerical simulation. The method analyses heat, vapour and moisture transfer through a building element to give an accurate measure of temperature, relative humidity and water content within the element over a specified time period.


These calculations are oſten called WUFI® calculations, named for the Wärme Und Feuchte Instationär (translation: heat and moisture transiency) soſtware developed by the Fraunhofer Institute for Building Physics in Germany. The soſtware operates in accordance with BS EN 15026.


Is it time for offsite manufacturers to measure in- service performance?


WUFI® calculations are just one aspect of wide- ranging technical support that we offer to offsite manufacturers. Training presentations and drawing mark-up are some of the services we offer at design stage. We visit factories, make recommendations, and give guidance on which of our membrane products are best suited to the solution being manufactured.


Fundamentally, we like to ask: what are you trying to achieve? What are your challenges? Then we look for the best product to give the answer. Support extends to installation as well, with toolbox talks, hands on training, site visits and reports.


Knowing how a completed building, delivered via offsite modules, will perform in reality, would send a powerful message. It would address any uncertainty, or even mistrust, around the construction method. It would confirm to clients and contractors that they’re receiving a solution with a known level of performance. Such certainty could reduce the number of hoops that manufacturers need to jump through – leading to more orders and those all-important economies of scale, without compromising quality.


Our Wraptite membrane might be the right solution for you, but it is not our only solution. To find out more about our membranes for offsite and MMC, and to find out how we can work with you to offer the right product (or combination of products) and technical support for your system, please visit www.proctorgroup.com or email contact@proctorgroup.com


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