Saving time, cost and carbon
With this modular approach, consultants can provide a complete set of standardised designs, including detailed shop drawings, early in the design stage. This facilitates the mass prefabrication of block modules and sub-modules off-site, enhancing production quality, simplifying installation, and easing MEP system maintenance. It is estimated that this approach can reduce the related design, manufacturing, coordination and installation man-hours by about 30%, saving both project costs and construction time.
By standardising MiMEP execution designs in tender specifications rather than addressing detailed MiMEP designs after the tendering process, greater accuracy in pricing and cost management can be achieved. We have been trying this approach in a few on-going local railway and large-scale date centre projects, and the estimation suggests that preliminary construction costs can be reduced by at least 20%.
This approach also enables project owners to estimate the total carbon footprints of their projects by simply adding up the actual quantity of MEP block modules needed. With all carbon data on hand, project owners can make informed decisions and sort out ways to achieve their decarbonisation goals.
Wider adoption on the horizon
This innovative modular MiMEP design can help popularise prefabricated MEP designs, significantly enhancing productivity and quality with time and cost savings. Given that MEP equipment is essential in structures across the globe, this approach can be applicable to all kinds of buildings, including data centres which have strict requirements for power and cooling supply.
In Hong Kong, the government is advocating the renovation of existing industrial buildings into data centres. We are applying this approach to design and expedite the renovation of a modular data centre, meeting the soaring local need for such mission-critical facilities. As the need for improving construction productivity is universal, we anticipate that other cities and regions will leverage this approach to accelerate the adoption of prefabricated MEP designs and boost construction productivity. This method is particularly relevant for areas with a high demand for power-intensive infrastructures like data centres.