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Consolidating loads for sustainable construction in New Zealand: a literature review-based research framework

Kamal Dhawan (Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand)
John Tookey (Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand)
Ali GhaffarianHoseini (Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand)
Amirhosein GhaffarianHoseini (Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand)

Smart and Sustainable Built Environment

ISSN: 2046-6099

Article publication date: 17 March 2022

Issue publication date: 5 July 2022

420

Abstract

Purpose

A long-term collaborative public water infrastructure procurement contract in New Zealand adopts “Enterprise Alliance” delivery (strategy) with a Construction Consolidation Centre (CCC) (operational) logistics solution. New Zealand's unique spatial, market, regulatory and economic circumstances present a research gap pertaining to the sustainability impacts of the combinatory implementation. The paper suggests a literature review-based research framework for examining these.

Design/methodology/approach

Systematic literature review (SLR) discovers unique New Zealand attributes, and sustainability impacts of both the approaches overseas. Towards formulating a research framework, the paper discusses sustainability of construction and its New Zealand context, and research focus within the implemented model. Significant issues from SLR reveal Design, Logistics, Impacts and Spin-offs research domains. The paper suggests a research framework and examines an appropriate research design.

Findings

CCC implementation under a programme alliance is without precedent in New Zealand. Variance of New Zealand's unique attributes from North American and European characteristics behind successful implementation are likely to impact domestic outcomes. A research framework to test this hypothesis will enable investigating the relevance of the concepts to New Zealand settings and provide a contextual implementation datum. Implementation benchmarks will potentially influence public policy and enrich indigenous knowledge corpus, potentially transferrable to associated domains (urban planning, transportation and energy).

Originality/value

The paper attempts to define a research direction in the domain of applying supply chain management principles to the New Zealand's construction sector by investigating the employment of a CCC in a collaborative environment as an infrastructure project delivery vehicle with sustainability leanings.

Keywords

Citation

Dhawan, K., Tookey, J., GhaffarianHoseini, A. and GhaffarianHoseini, A. (2022), "Consolidating loads for sustainable construction in New Zealand: a literature review-based research framework", Smart and Sustainable Built Environment, Vol. 11 No. 2, pp. 313-333. https://doi.org/10.1108/SASBE-08-2021-0151

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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