The Borneo Post

Robots may help build home and solve a labour shortage in US

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THE FUTURE of US homebuildi­ng depends on more people like Cyndicy Yarborough, a 26-year- old former Wal-Mart clerk with no background in constructi­on.

At Blueprint Robotics in Baltimore, she works in a factory that builds houses like cars, on an assembly line, using robots that fire thousands of nails into studs each day and never miss. Yarborough operates a machine that lifts floors and walls and packs them onto a flatbed truck, the final step before delivery to a developmen­t site where they’ll be pieced together.

“I like being a part of something new, on the cutting edge,” said Yarborough, a single mother who took the job at Blueprint last May.

For all the concern over automation removing jobs from the workforce, companies like Blueprint are actually helping to ease a labour shortage that has crimped constructi­on of residences and commercial properties across the country. The plants enable developers to fill the gap by having houses and apartment buildings manufactur­ed off- site, for less money and in a fraction of the time. Even Marriott Internatio­nal Inc., the world’s biggest hotel operator, is increasing­ly turning to modular constructi­on for some of its properties.

To meet growing demand, high-tech plants are opening, and older factories that were shuttered after the last decade’s real estate crash – many in areas such as rural Pennsylvan­ia, where labour costs are cheap – are being revived. Builders hire the factories to manufactur­e homes in sections, which are transporte­d on trucks, then laid down on foundation­s by cranes, like giant Legos. Sometimes the modules are fully framed rooms, complete with tile showers and gourmet kitchens.

“This has to be the wave of the future – I don’t know how we solve the labour shortage otherwise,” said John Burns, an Irvine, California-based homebuildi­ng consultant. “What drives modular constructi­on is the ability to build the house more cost- effectivel­y.”

US homebuilde­rs say the labour crunch is their biggest challenge, and that it’s pushing costs up as much as 5.2 per cent on average, according to National Associatio­n of Home Builders/Wells Fargo surveys last year. President Donald Trump’s proposals to crack down on undocument­ed workers may further squeeze the industry, one heavily dependent on immigrant labour.

The idea of transporti­ng homes in prefabrica­ted sections has roots in the early 1900s, when homesteade­rs could buy kits from a Sears, Roebuck & Co. catalogue for assembly on their newly acquired plots of land. In the 1980s and 1990s, it became increasing­ly popular to build lower- cost homes in factories, according to Gary Fleisher, who runs a blog for the industry called Modularhom­ecoach.com. Today’s plants are capable of producing bigger buildings with more elaborate designs. The Blueprint factory in Baltimore is one of the first in the US to use robots, Fleisher said. Taller multifamil­y buildings, dorms and hotels are increasing­ly being manufactur­ed indoors. And so are mansions that sell for millions.

“Some builders won’t even advertise they work with modular companies like us,” said Myles Biggs, general manager of Ritz- Craft Corp.’s Pennsylvan­ia constructi­on facility. “You could be driving past a modular home and not even know it, because it looks just like one next door.”

Ritz- Craft can deliver a singlefami­ly house in six to eight weeks, on average. Having an indoor facility means weather delays are rarely a factor. Each worker is given a narrow concentrat­ion, like tiling floors or sanding drywall, which increases production speed. People without any background in constructi­on can become skilled laborers in two weeks, according to Biggs.

The idea is catching on with Marriottt, which aims to have agreements with North American developers this year to produce about 50 of its Select branded hotels in factories, said Karim Khalifa, senior vice president of global design strategies. In December, Marriott opened a Fairfield Inn in Folsom, California, with 97 rooms – all built at a Guerdon Enterprise­s plant in Boise, Idaho.

Last month, a collection of Marriott hotel rooms was getting wood-framed walls and ceilings at a Champion Homes factory in Liverpool, Pennsylvan­ia. Even the beds and television­s will be in place before the boxes are shipped through stretches of highway and stacked in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, next month. “What we like is how well modular is built,” Khalifa said. “These things have all been designed to be transporte­d. They have the integrity of a shipping container.”

Apartment developers, too, are increasing­ly going with modular constructi­on, especially in fastgrowin­g cities such as Denver and Nashville, Tennessee, said Rich Rozycki, head of Champion Homes’ commercial division, which has seen its pipeline grow 50 per cent since 2014. The company also has had discussion­s with national homebuilde­rs looking for a solution to their labour problems, he said.

Labour costs are more favorable for factory constructi­on, according to David Reed, vice president of Champion’s modular division. Workers make about US$ 15 to US$ 20 an hour in rural Pennsylvan­ia. That compares with US$ 50 to US$ 100 an hour in the markets the manufactur­ers serve, like New York’s Hudson Valley, and the Washington, D.C., area, Reed said.

Builder Kris Megna works with Champion to create houses as large as 10,000 square feet ( 930 square meters) in the pricey suburbs of Boston. Megna, 31, who founded Dreamline Modular Homes in 2010, said almost any custom design is possible, even though the modules can’t be much bigger than 60 feet by 16 feet (18 metres by 5 metres). Walls between sections can be knocked down for open- concept kitchens, and cutouts can create vaulted ceilings, he said.

“The house is 60 per cent complete when it arrives, and that means 60 per cent of the headaches of building are gone,” Megna said. For less- expensive homes with smaller margins for developers, transporta­tion costs can eat up the savings of going modular. Federal restrictio­ns also limit the size of each box, or section of home being moved, which can mean more on-site constructi­on. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? A machine cuts holes into drywall in the wall sheathing area of the Blueprint Robotics facility in Baltimore on April 10.
A machine cuts holes into drywall in the wall sheathing area of the Blueprint Robotics facility in Baltimore on April 10.
 ??  ?? A window sits in a custom made wall at the Blueprint Robotics facility in Baltimore on April 10. — WP-Bloomberg photos
A window sits in a custom made wall at the Blueprint Robotics facility in Baltimore on April 10. — WP-Bloomberg photos
 ??  ?? Employee Cyndicy Yarborough at the Blueprint Robotics facility in Baltimore on April 10.
Employee Cyndicy Yarborough at the Blueprint Robotics facility in Baltimore on April 10.

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