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Industry 4.0 deployment in the construction industry: a bibliometric literature review and UK-based case study

Journal

SMART AND SUSTAINABLE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages 557-580

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/SASBE-02-2020-0016

Keywords

Construction industry; Industry 4; 0; Case study; Bibliometric analysis; Content analysis; Advanced technologies

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Industry 4.0 is predicted to revolutionize commercial and manufacturing practices through improved knowledge utilization, but the construction industry has been slow to adopt innovations. Research shows that Industry 4.0 is relatively new, with developed countries and Germany leading in the field.
Purpose Industry 4.0 is predicted to be a game-changer, revolutionizing commercial and manufacturing practices through improved knowledge utilization and efficiencies. The barriers however, are significant, and the construction industry remains notoriously slow to take up innovations. This study reviews the research work in Industry 4.0 as it relates to construction, and examines a leading UK-based construction firm to ascertain the prognosis for Industry 4.0 roll-out in terms of the impediments and opportunities. Design/methodology/approach A multistage mixed philosophies and methods approach was adopted for this study. First, an interpretivist epistemological lens was used to synthesise extant literature as a means of contextualizing the present study. Second, an empirical case study using a post-positivist stance and inductive reasoning was conducted to explore practitioner acceptance of Industry 4.0 in the UK construction context. Findings Findings from the literature review indicate studies in Industry 4.0 to be a relatively new phenomenon, with developed countries and Germany in particular leading in the field. The range of opportunities are many, but so too are the barriers to enablement. Findings from the case study provide real-world corroboration of the review; practitioners are sanguine about Industry 4.0's potential to reinvigorate the construction industry, but also note that implementation remains curtailed by residual managerial practices dependent on 'human interaction'. At present, much of the focus of industry practitioners is on the implementation of building information modelling (BIM), often at the expense of other more advanced technologies within Industry 4.0. Originality/value Research in Industry 4.0 is limited, with the emphasis being on technology application. This paper, by contrast, maps the totality of work carried out so far and presents an assessment of Industry 4.0's progression, potential and degree of uptake within the UK construction industry.

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