#02/24
THE GLOBAL MAGAZINE FOR GF EMPLOYEES

Customization on the GF shop floor is key to the success of the ­prefabrication process.

© GF
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Ready, set, assemble!

Prefabrication, or off-site manufacturing (OSM), is revolutionizing the construction industry, merging innovation with efficiency. This approach not only expedites building processes, but also enhances global project sustainability as GF Piping Systems is experiencing.

Until recently, construction happened at the construction site. From bricklayers to pipefitters, everyone responsible for putting together a building did their work on location. That started to change a few decades ago, when construction companies began experimenting with prefabricated components – concrete panels that could be trucked in and assembled into walls and floors, for example. Prefabrication began catching on in the European and US markets about 40 years ago. According to James Chandler, based in Coventry (UK) and Head of Global Proposals and OSM Engineering for GF’s OSM and Custom Product department, “prefab” or “off-site manufacturing” (OSM) has quickly gained popularity in the last 20 years. It’s an opportunity GF, with its expertise in both manufacturing and engineering, hasn’t let slip by.

GF’s OSM and engineering market entry

GF entered the market in the early 2000s to address the needs of construction companies turning to plastic piping for building water supplies. “We found contractors weren’t used to using plastic, so GF set up a shop to help them,” James says. The move was a success, prompting customers to buy more GF piping, says James: “It developed organically in the early stages, but now it’s written into the company’s 2025 strategy as a way to grow.”

graphic © GF

James Chandler

Position: Head of Global Proposals and Engineering, Global Industries
Division: GF Piping Systems
Location: Coventry (UK)
Joined GF in: 2016

Think of prefab as a click-together solution, the construction industry equivalent of flat-pack furniture on a factory-sized scale. GF engineers steer the design process from beginning to end to make sure the pieces – known as pipe spools, modules, or racks – fit in shipping containers, trucks, crates and pallets, and can be assembled at their destination. GF fabrication shops around the world assemble and weld the piping systems for an entire building in pieces that can be shipped locally, regionally and worldwide, and easily put together on a building site.

Overcoming challenges

That doesn’t mean it’s easy. Engineers have to design a factory’s worth of piping systems, then make sure they can be built in shippable-sized chunks. Once loaded into containers and trucks, the components have to withstand the jolts and bumps of the shipping process itself, something James likens to “a 100-kilometer earthquake.”

For customers, the advantages are huge. Labor costs on site are reduced, and precision tasks like welding pipes can be done by experts on a factory floor, far from the dust and noise of an active construction site. It’s also more sustainable, because packaging for individual pipes can be eliminated or recycled at the fabrication shop and doesn’t get shipped to the job site.

graphic © GF
Skids for ultrapure water applications are assembled in Irvine, CA (US), one of GF’s 16 prefabrication centers. See the map below for locations of the other centers.

The standardization path

Certain kinds of project, meanwhile, benefit most from a prefab approach. “Standardization is key,” James says. “If engineering work can be duplicated from project to project, or modified slightly to work in a new building, a small team of engineers can have a huge impact on costs.” Fortunately, “most buildings look very similar now.”

Some industries take that to an extreme. Semiconductor factories and data centers, for example, are nearly identical no matter where in the world they are built. “That really lends itself to what we do,” James says. On a recent data center project in Ireland, the first building pipework was supplied as loose product and took the local contractor six months to install. The second project utilized prefabricated pipe sticks and spools, and on the third the team designed and built the pipework racks and modules within six weeks.

Growth and global expansion

The outlook is good. In the last five years alone, GF has opened five new fabrication centers, for a total of 16 fabrication shops around the world. Some of them have developed specialties based on local market demand: GF’s facility in Spain, for example, focuses on water treatment installations, while the shop in Irvine, California is oriented towards outfitting new-build microchip plants for Intel and others with the complex piping needed for semiconductor manufacturing.

The division has seen double-digit growth over the last five years. In the Asian market, where lower labor costs have traditionally kept demand for prefabrication approaches low, GF has achieved growth by pushing the engineering and quality-control aspect. “All this revenue generation is supported by a small team of engineers and fab shop employees,” James says. “The fabricators are the unsung heroes – they turn whatever we think is a good idea into reality.”

The prefab formula

Prefabrication is the secret to success in construction. GF Piping Systems blends innovation and efficiency to deliver faster, more sustainable projects around the world.

Since the 1980s

prefabrication began gaining popularity in European and US markets.

5 new prefab centers

 opened within the last five years.

graphic

16 is the total number

of prefabrication centers operated by GF worldwide.

graphic

How prefabrication can streamline the construction process:

26 weeks

The time it took to complete the pipework for the first data center project in Ireland.

graphic

6 weeks

The time it took to complete the pipe install on the third data center.

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