Context, drivers, and future potential for wood-frame multi-story construction in Europe
Compared to many manufacturing industries, there have been few major improvements over the past few
decades in the productivity, profitability, or the environmental impact of construction. However, driven by institutional
changes, promotion campaigns, and technological development in the 1990s, novel industrial woodframe
multi-story construction (WMC) practices have been emerging in some European countries. The aim of
the study is to explore the WMC market potential in Europe by combining two complementary approaches:
Top-down scenario analysis and bottom-up innovation diffusion analysis. The results show that the WMC
diffusion is heavily dependent on the regulatory framework and the structure of the construction industry. The
risk-averse nature of the construction value chain resisting the uptake of new practices appears to be a more significant
hindrance for the future market potential of WMC, compared to the possible competition from alternative
construction practices. It would require both increasing competition within the WMC sector and increasing
co-operation betweenwood product suppliers and the construction sector to attract investments, to reduce costs,
and to make the WMC practices more credible throughout the construction value chain.
JONSSON Klas;
HURMEKOSKI Elias;
NORD Tomas;
2015-07-28
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
JRC96925
0040-1625,
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0040162515002115,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC96925,
10.1016/j.techfore.2015.07.002,
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