logo
#

Latest news with #EhsanNoroozinejad

How Laura's stylish house was built twice as fast as normal
How Laura's stylish house was built twice as fast as normal

Sydney Morning Herald

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Sydney Morning Herald

How Laura's stylish house was built twice as fast as normal

Traditionally-built houses take more than a year from approval to completion, according to ABS and AMP data. Prefab and modular experts say they can get more homes built affordably, up to 50 per cent faster, and with fewer disruptions. Prefabricated components are made in a factory and assembled on site; modular sections are factory-produced and combined on site. Prefab modular is a hybrid. Governments need to commit up to 70 per cent of social housing projects to prefab or modular, to achieve the kind of scale that will reduce costs, says Dr Ehsan Noroozinejad, a senior researcher and global challenge lead at Western Sydney University. 'We need some sort of support from the government,' he says. 'We cannot push the private sector and the community alone to use this technology.' The Australian Building Codes Board (ABCB), a joint body of the federal and state and territory governments, released a handbook last year on how to use modern methods in line with the National Construction Code, and is developing a voluntary certification scheme for manufacturers. However, prefab and modular is still unfamiliar to some councils and building certifiers, who are the guardians of permits and approvals, experts say. A lack of understanding is delaying what should be a speedy option. Noroozinejad says there is not enough training in how to approve the final product, and the voluntary scheme will be more effective if it were compulsory. 'The certifiers and the councils are not familiar with this technology, or they believe that it is not suitable for their area because of cultural heritage value,' he says. 'If the process is streamlined, this type of technology should be very efficient. Otherwise, it's not working.' Jennings' home is the work of Prebuilt, a prefabricated modular manufacturer with a base in Kilsyth and another near Newcastle in NSW. Prebuilt chief executive Malcolm Batten says incorrect perceptions of modular have held it back from wider adoption. 'When the average person thinks modular, they think of flimsy, temporary and cheap, and the permanent buildings we do are not flimsy,' he says. 'They're very strong and will last as long, or longer, than a conventional build.' Prebuilt has constructed hotels, family homes, granny flats, farmhouses and beach retreats, from Sydney's high-end Mosman to the hamlet of Lorne, on Victoria's Great Ocean Road. However, some councils are so uncertain about what modular means, they scotch planning applications that come across their desk. Loading 'In one of them in NSW, we can't put a modular building there because their statutes talk about modular like it's a caravan, and so you're not allowed to because it comes in on the back of the truck,' Batten says. Another hindrance has been access to finance, leaving home owners to meet 90 per cent of upfront costs or enter into arrangements with their builder, as Jennings did. Many banks have been unwilling to make progress payments to builders when the asset – the block of land – is not gaining value while construction occurs elsewhere. However, their stance is softening. The Commonwealth Bank has changed its lending criteria after collaborating with industry group PrefabAUS, and now provides prefab and modular home loans of up to 60 per cent of the contract price. Damien Crough, co-founder and executive chair of PrefabAUS and managing director of Advanced Offsite Group, says companies were shouldering the financial risk, which limited their growth. 'Planning, regulation and financial models all need to be adjusted to recognise off-site construction,' he says, 'and so that's what we've been working on.' PrefabAUS members have drafted an advice paper for the treasurer on barriers to financing and Crough is assisting the ABCB in streamlining industry definitions. Tahi Merrilees and his Wild Modular co-founder Alex Tattle launched their company in 2021 after years on old-fashioned building sites. 'We got sick of trudging around in mud and being delayed, and it got to a point where we just started looking at better ways to build,' Merrilees says. The Sydney-based company has just delivered three social houses in Wollongong for the NSW government under a pilot program. All were handed over within six months, but the build time was only three-and-a-half weeks. To help facilitate loans, Merrilees and Tattle have set up live-feed cameras in their Wetherill Park factory to track progress of projects. The transparency has compelled more lenders to fund their projects, from Tasmania to WA and the Whitsundays. 'There's change happening to make it smoother,' Merrilees says. 'That's going to have a massive impact on housing supply as the industry grows.' Noroozinejad says only 4 per cent to 5 per cent of Australian housing is prefab, compared to European countries such as Sweden, where it is 84 per cent. To increase output, he proposes empty car manufacturing plants be repurposed as prefab housing factories. 'We have the capacity and very positive feedback from the industry,' he says. Jennings, an experienced renovator, has been astonished by what modular can achieve. 'I love the level of finish,' she says. 'After doing renovations that have gone way too long, the build time was extraordinary.'

How Laura's stylish house was built twice as fast as normal
How Laura's stylish house was built twice as fast as normal

The Age

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • The Age

How Laura's stylish house was built twice as fast as normal

Traditionally-built houses take more than a year from approval to completion, according to ABS and AMP data. Prefab and modular experts say they can get more homes built affordably, up to 50 per cent faster, and with fewer disruptions. Prefabricated components are made in a factory and assembled on site; modular sections are factory-produced and combined on site. Prefab modular is a hybrid. Governments need to commit up to 70 per cent of social housing projects to prefab or modular, to achieve the kind of scale that will reduce costs, says Dr Ehsan Noroozinejad, a senior researcher and global challenge lead at Western Sydney University. 'We need some sort of support from the government,' he says. 'We cannot push the private sector and the community alone to use this technology.' The Australian Building Codes Board (ABCB), a joint body of the federal and state and territory governments, released a handbook last year on how to use modern methods in line with the National Construction Code, and is developing a voluntary certification scheme for manufacturers. However, prefab and modular is still unfamiliar to some councils and building certifiers, who are the guardians of permits and approvals, experts say. A lack of understanding is delaying what should be a speedy option. Noroozinejad says there is not enough training in how to approve the final product, and the voluntary scheme will be more effective if it were compulsory. 'The certifiers and the councils are not familiar with this technology, or they believe that it is not suitable for their area because of cultural heritage value,' he says. 'If the process is streamlined, this type of technology should be very efficient. Otherwise, it's not working.' Jennings' home is the work of Prebuilt, a prefabricated modular manufacturer with a base in Kilsyth and another near Newcastle in NSW. Prebuilt chief executive Malcolm Batten says incorrect perceptions of modular have held it back from wider adoption. 'When the average person thinks modular, they think of flimsy, temporary and cheap, and the permanent buildings we do are not flimsy,' he says. 'They're very strong and will last as long, or longer, than a conventional build.' Prebuilt has constructed hotels, family homes, granny flats, farmhouses and beach retreats, from Sydney's high-end Mosman to the hamlet of Lorne, on Victoria's Great Ocean Road. However, some councils are so uncertain about what modular means, they scotch planning applications that come across their desk. Loading 'In one of them in NSW, we can't put a modular building there because their statutes talk about modular like it's a caravan, and so you're not allowed to because it comes in on the back of the truck,' Batten says. Another hindrance has been access to finance, leaving home owners to meet 90 per cent of upfront costs or enter into arrangements with their builder, as Jennings did. Many banks have been unwilling to make progress payments to builders when the asset – the block of land – is not gaining value while construction occurs elsewhere. However, their stance is softening. The Commonwealth Bank has changed its lending criteria after collaborating with industry group PrefabAUS, and now provides prefab and modular home loans of up to 60 per cent of the contract price. Damien Crough, co-founder and executive chair of PrefabAUS and managing director of Advanced Offsite Group, says companies were shouldering the financial risk, which limited their growth. 'Planning, regulation and financial models all need to be adjusted to recognise off-site construction,' he says, 'and so that's what we've been working on.' PrefabAUS members have drafted an advice paper for the treasurer on barriers to financing and Crough is assisting the ABCB in streamlining industry definitions. Tahi Merrilees and his Wild Modular co-founder Alex Tattle launched their company in 2021 after years on old-fashioned building sites. 'We got sick of trudging around in mud and being delayed, and it got to a point where we just started looking at better ways to build,' Merrilees says. The Sydney-based company has just delivered three social houses in Wollongong for the NSW government under a pilot program. All were handed over within six months, but the build time was only three-and-a-half weeks. To help facilitate loans, Merrilees and Tattle have set up live-feed cameras in their Wetherill Park factory to track progress of projects. The transparency has compelled more lenders to fund their projects, from Tasmania to WA and the Whitsundays. 'There's change happening to make it smoother,' Merrilees says. 'That's going to have a massive impact on housing supply as the industry grows.' Noroozinejad says only 4 per cent to 5 per cent of Australian housing is prefab, compared to European countries such as Sweden, where it is 84 per cent. To increase output, he proposes empty car manufacturing plants be repurposed as prefab housing factories. 'We have the capacity and very positive feedback from the industry,' he says. Jennings, an experienced renovator, has been astonished by what modular can achieve. 'I love the level of finish,' she says. 'After doing renovations that have gone way too long, the build time was extraordinary.'

Largest modular social housing build in NSW opens in South Grafton
Largest modular social housing build in NSW opens in South Grafton

ABC News

time29-07-2025

  • Science
  • ABC News

Largest modular social housing build in NSW opens in South Grafton

Residents have moved into the largest modular social housing development in New South Wales, which academics say could be the future of affordable housing in Australia. Twenty-four modular homes were built on the central coast and taken to South Grafton for assembly and installation, as part of the $9 million project. NSW Housing Minister Rose Jackson said the process took less than six months, which was less than half the time it took for a traditional build. "We're building homes the traditional way as well, but this particular way of delivering housing is appealing because it's so quick," Ms Jackson said. "We need homes as quickly as we can. We have thousands and thousands of people who are desperately looking for that roof over their heads." Using modular construction, also called pre-fabricated construction, a house is built in individual modules off-site from where it will ultimately be located. The South Grafton site comprises of 12 one-bedroom and 12 two-bedroom units. Ehsan Noroozinejad, who is a senior researcher at the Urban Transformation Research Centre at Western Sydney University, said governments should use modular housing more widely to address the housing crisis. "Compared to the current traditional housing, I think this is much cheaper, this is much faster," Dr Noroozinejad said. Dr Noroozinejad said many people were unaware of how high quality modular housing could be. "The basic idea is that the whole structure will be manufactured in a high-quality factory setting using robotic technology," he said. "Then they'll be transported to the construction site and assembled together like Lego." Ms Jackson said modular housing would play an increasingly large role in social housing, particularly in regional areas. "We have 90 in the pipeline for the next year, but my view is that it's only going to get larger," Ms Jackson said. "In coming years, thousands of homes will be delivered using these methods." Lee Haworth, who spent six years on a social housing waiting list, said she could not speak highly enough of the initiative that had given her a home. "I couldn't believe it when I got the keys," she said. "I had to pinch myself because I've been waiting for so long. "If I want to paint, I can paint. If I want to sing, I can sing. Despite technological evolutions such as 3D printing and robotics, Australia has a comparatively small modular construction market compared to other countries. "It's about 5 per cent overall," Dr Noroozinejad said. "For example, in Sweden, it's over 84 per cent being built with modular." He said part of that low take-up was due to community stigma, with people believing the houses were low-quality temporary structures like post-WW2 "dongas" or Nissen huts. "But everything has changed regarding the technology and the optimisation we are using to produce these modules," Dr Noroozinejad said. "Modular and prefab are much better in terms of flexibility for the architect and they're much more energy efficient." State and federal governments are trialling modular housing, with the latest federal government budget investing $54 million to support the industry. NSW, Victoria, Queensland and Tasmania have invested in pre-fabrication for social housing. So far, NSW has rolled out modular social housing in South Grafton and Wollongong, with builds in Lake Macquarie and Shellharbour expected to be delivered by the end of the year.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store