Supply chain crisis could force construction to modernise

June 8, 2021 / Isla MacFarlane
Supply chain crisis could force construction to modernise

The ‘perfect storm’ of Brexit, Covid and the Suez blockage has left the British building industry in the midst of a supply chain crisis, but it could bring about long-overdue change, says industry specialist Dan Grimshaw.

Dan, founder of design and construction firm Beam Development, says the present disruption, although tough to take, could ultimately hasten the modernisation of the sector and deliver a fundamentally-different ‘new normal’.

“If we look at the current dominance of next-day delivery options, we need to ask whether it is the most efficient and sustainable way of doing things,” said Dan.

“Suppliers have little idea what is coming down the line, because nobody is looking forward; they are just looking back at what they sold last week and the week before and basing the next week’s orders on that.

“For the industry to adapt and flourish, we need to co-ordinate information across the supply chain and embrace the use of new digital technologies, such as product configurators or cloud manufacturing.

“It could lead to a visible shift to a more-considered, more-productive, more-planned way of working in the next five to 10 years.”

Dan says employing a more vigorous project management process could also lead to a reappraisal of geographic links and vulnerabilities.

“Each sector of materials has its own story, but all of those stories are interconnected by Covid and Brexit”, added Dan.

“Hitherto builders and contractors have had little idea where their materials came from because they had no need to ask about the breakdown and traceability of products.

“But since leaving Europe and the start of the pandemic, we are more tuned into how and why a supply chain might be affected. There is an appreciation of where materials are coming from and the challenges of procuring and transporting them.

“From being dependent on next-day-delivery options and doing things in bits and bobs, adapting to the new changes will ultimately make the sector more productive.

“Ordering 10 bags of cement for tomorrow and then and then 50 in the next day or when you need it, is not necessarily the most efficient way of doing things.

“Thinking and planning ahead a bit more is no bad thing. And from a sustainability point of view, the harder it is to get hold of something, the more valuable it becomes. Scarcity increases value, and in turn you attach more value to it.”

Dan says the future may see the decline of just-in-time-style procurement and the increasing importance of project management and says this will also require training.

“For the sector to prosper, we urgently need to develop and nurture the people that work for us. We need more home-grown permanent staff and to build teams and keep them, rather than just drafting people in.

“The key to a dynamic future lies in training, on-boarding and recruiting people into the sector from an early age and who have an energetic outlook to their prospects and their career.

“Without doubt the industry has a daunting task ahead of it that will require bold and agile moves and deft navigation, but the size of the prize is enormous.”

Dan Grimshaw is a design and construction specialist based in Bath and London who has worked on premium residential projects for more than 15 years.

Dan believes in the importance of nurturing talent and is a mentor to the British Library’s prestigious Innovating for Growth programme, and is on the jury for the BLT Built Design Awards 2021.

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