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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Sundquist Viktoria 1976) "

Sökning: WFRF:(Sundquist Viktoria 1976)

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1.
  • Andersson, Dan, 1966, et al. (författare)
  • Transport service procurement – initial findings and a research agenda
  • 2016
  • Ingår i: 25th IPSERA Conference, Dortmund, March 20-23, 2016..
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Technology alone will not be sufficient to cope with emission reduction challenges. Transport procurement requires attention for individual firms as well as the transport industry to tackle environmental challenges. The aim of this paper is to identify practice, perceptions and outlook of transport buyers in order to present a research agenda that informs the advancement of current practice, on the basis of surveys, capturing practice among Swedish transport buyers. The direction for future research comprise levels of analysis ranging from the service level to industry-level, and suggest a mixed-method, wherein surveys are combined with in-depth case studies and workshops.
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2.
  • Disney, Oliver, 1985, et al. (författare)
  • Total BIM Project: The Future of a Digital Construction Process
  • 2022
  • Ingår i: Industry4.0 Applications for Full Lifecycle Integration of Buildings. - 9780992716134 ; 21, s. 21-30
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Although the construction industry strives to implement Building Information Modeling (BIM) to improve efficiency and quality, adoption in the actual construction phase is still limited. However, in Scandinavia, recent years have seen the rise of an idea known as Total BIM - An approach where the BIM is the legally binding construction document and no traditional 2D-drawings are used on-site. In this paper we present a case study of a successful Total BIM project. We investigate the prerequisites for – and outcomes of – implementing the Total BIM concept, where commonly found individual and isolated BIM uses is turned into an all-inclusive approach to achieve a more efficient design and construction process. Our analysis shows that the success was contingent on factors from within several different areas, including strategy and innovation, organizing, and technology, but also on the commitment shown by the construction management company responsible for the project. In addition, three key elements were identified; BIM as the legally binding construction document, cloud-based model management, and user-friendly on-site mobile BIM software.
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3.
  • Dubois, Anna, 1962, et al. (författare)
  • Configuring transport and logistics activities in construction
  • 2016
  • Konferensbidrag (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Increasing the efficiency in construction is a key industrial as well as societal concern. In this paper we focus on one salient category of efficiency improvements; transport and logistics activities. However, these activities cannot be analysed in isolation since they depend on, and set the conditions for, other activities, both at construction sites and up-steams the construction materials' supply chains. While the efficiency in construction is, and has been a general concern for a long time, the growing focus on urban conditions for construction, transport and logistics place new and stronger demands on efficiency - in particular with regard to efficient use of vehicles, road space and site space considering increasingly dense cities.   The aim of the paper is to identify and scrutinise transport and logistics activities in construction and how the ways in which these are configured impact on construction efficiency. The analysis focuses on three levels of analysis; (1) efficiency at the construction site, (2) efficiency in supply chains ending in the building (activity focus), (3) efficiency in the use of resources.   Numerous studies claim that the construction industry suffers from poor performance (e.g. Bankvall et al., 2010; Love et al., 2004; Vrijhoef and Koskela, 2000). Supply chain management, including concepts like partnering and lean construction, has been identified as a mean to improve efficiency, but the recommended integration in construction processes is challenging (Briscoe and Dainty, 2005).  Fadiya et al. (2015) argue that linking supply logistics (including activities such as specification, acquisition, transport and delivery of materials to the site), and site logistics (including physical flow planning and organizing on the site) is key. Similarly, Ying et al., (2014: 262) claim that efficiency and effectiveness of a construction project “heavily depends on coordination of the on-site and external logistics”. Hence, how the conditions for efficiency at the construction site interrelate with efficient supply chains ‘ending up’ at the site need to be further scrutinized with a focus on the configuring of transport and logistics activities, including how they interrelate with other activities on-site and off-site. Such scrutiny must take, not only the serial coordination of activities in to account as the SCM principles tends to highlight, but also the interdependence between a range of various supply chains to each and at every construction site (Bankvall et al., 2010). Moreover, conditions for activity configuring are closely intertwined with the reasoning for efficient use of resources. ‘Lean thinking’ addresses resources with an emphasis on rationalization, hence, the main objective is to lower the total amount of resources (Cooper et al., 1997). However, such thinking only covers one aspect of change to improve efficiency. Considering resource heterogeneity, i.e. the value of a resource depends on how it is combined with other resources (Alchian and Demsetz, 1972), resource development is to a large extent about how to use existing resources in novel ways, for instance, by exploiting unused features or providing new resource combinations (Gadde et al., 2002). Directing more attention to resource utilization can advance the understanding of activity configuration patterns. In addition, taking into account the various actors’ perspectives add to the perception of how different logics may be balanced (Bygballe and Jahre, 2009).    We elaborate on three principal configurations of transport and logistics activities in relation to construction projects;   ·      The bilateral configuration wherein each material supplier delivers to the site, and the site logistics is coordinated within the construction project.   ·      The site focused configuration wherein the transport activities to, and the logistics activities on, the site are subject to coordination.   ·      The supply network coordinated configuration wherein the supply to and at the site, including all transport and logistics activities, are subject to coordination.   The three configurations are featured by different scopes of coordination and thus also of different conditions to handle interfaces and interdependencies with other resources and activities. In addition, the configurations address the actor dimension and the issue of division of labour in construction.   References: Alchian, A.  and Demsetz, H. (1972) Production, Information Costs and Economic Organization. The American Economic Review, 62, 77-95.   Bankvall, L., Bygballe, L., Dubois, A. and Jahre, M. (2010), Interdependence in supply chains and projects in construction, Supply Chain Management: An International Journal, 15(5), 385-393.   Briscoe, G. and Dainty, A. (2005), Construction supply chain integration: an elusive goal, Supply Chain Management: An International Journal, 10(4), 319-326.   Bygballe, L. and Jahre, M. (2009), Balancing value creating logics in construction, Construction Management and Economics, 27(7), 695-704.   Cooper, M., D. Lambert, and J. Pagh, 1997. Supply Chain Management: More Than a New Name for Logistics, The International Journal of Logistics Management, 8(1), 1-14.   Fadiya, O., Georgakis, P., Chinyio, E. and Nwagboso, C. (2015), Decision-making framework for selecting ICT-based construction logistics systems, Journal of Engineering, Design and Technology, 13(2), 260-281.   Gadde, L.-E., Håkansson, H., Jahre, M. and Persson, G. (2002) “More instead of less” – Strategies for the use of logistics resources, Journal onChain and network science, 2 (2), 81 – 91.   Love, P.E.D., Irani, Z. and Edwards, D.J. (2004), A seamless supply chain management model for construction, Supply Chain Management: An International Journal, 9(1), 43-56.   Vrijhoef, R. and Koskela, L. (2000), The four roles of supply chain management in construction, European Journal of Purchasing and Supply Management, 6(3-4), 169-78.   Ying, F., Tookey, J. and Roberti, J. (2014), Addressing effective construction logistics through the lens of vehicle movements, Engineering, Construction and Architectural Management, 21(3), 261-275.
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4.
  • Dubois, Anna, 1962, et al. (författare)
  • No concept is an island : conceptualising (in) the industrial network approach
  • 2023
  • Ingår i: Journal of business & industrial marketing. - : Emerald Group Publishing Limited. - 0885-8624 .- 2052-1189. ; 38:13, s. 211-219
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to inquire into how conceptualising is done in the industrial network approach (INA). Design/methodology/approach: The description and analysis of conceptualising is based on key INA references and an example illustrating the characteristics of conceptualising in individual studies. Findings: The paper concludes that there is an open and interactive way of conceptualising in the INA. The empirical and theoretical grounding achieved through combining concepts in individual empirical studies interplays with conceptual development in the research community over time. Research limitations/implications: Three paradoxes are suggested for further discussion of conceptualising as a key element in theorising in the INA community. Originality/value: By explicating how INA researchers engage in conceptualising both in individual empirical studies and as a community, the authors identify characteristics similar to the empirical phenomena in focus of the research: interaction, combining and heterogeneity of concepts. 
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5.
  • Dubois, Anna, 1962, et al. (författare)
  • Organising logistics and transport activities in construction
  • 2019
  • Ingår i: International Journal of Logistics Management. - 0957-4093 .- 1758-6550. ; 30:2, s. 620-640
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to identify and analyse how different ways of organising transport and logistics activities in construction impact on efficiency. The paper scrutinises three particular transport and logistics configurations: the de-centralised coordinated configuration, the on-site coordinated configuration and the supply network coordinated configuration. Design/methodology/approach – Three configurations are derived from the literature and from case studies. The efficiency of the three configurations is analysed on three levels of analysis: the construction site, the supply chain, and across supply chains and construction sites. Findings – The paper concludes that there are possibilities to enhance efficiency on all three levels of analysis by widening the scope of coordination beyond the individual construction site. Practical implications – The analysis points to efficiency potentials in applying the supply network coordinated configuration, although this configuration puts high demands on collaboration amongst the actors involved. Originality/value – The paper provides illustration, and explanation, of the efficiency potentials involved in the three configurations.
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6.
  • Dubois, Anna, 1962, et al. (författare)
  • Supply Network Flexibility
  • 2004
  • Ingår i: Proceedings of the 20th IMP Conference, Copenhagen, September 2-4.
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)
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8.
  • Eriksson, Victor, 1990, et al. (författare)
  • The role of public actors in construction logistics: effects on and of relational interfaces
  • 2021
  • Ingår i: Construction Management and Economics. - Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom : Informa UK Limited. - 1466-433X .- 0144-6193. ; 39:10, s. 791-806
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Public actors are increasingly enforcing the use of specifically designed construction logistics setups (CLS) to cope with logistical challenges and minimising disturbances on third parties in large construction projects. The organising of these CLS is contingent on the interaction among several types of actors. The purpose of the paper is to advance the understanding of the design and use of CLS and the distribution of various outcomes of such arrangements on the actors involved. The paper analyses the role of public actors in the initiating of CLS and how this affects the relational interfaces in the CLS triad of developers, contractors and logistics service providers, and the outcomes of their interactions. First, the main reason for a public actor to initiate a CLS is not cost, productivity or innovativity gains, but to decrease disturbances on third parties. Second, developers and contractors are forced to use the CLS initiated by the public actor. This makes them take on a forced customer role, explaining why these actors are often resistant to adopt to a certain CLS. Third, ripple effects, such as unintended costs and productivity impacts, occur in the construction supply chain because of the use of CLS.
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9.
  • Havenvid Ingemansson, Malena, et al. (författare)
  • When construction projects are to satisfy health care needs - partnering as a way of connecting the two?
  • 2019
  • Ingår i: The 35th IMP Conference.
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • In the construction industry the intention with partnering is that it should facilitate closer interaction between the client and the project organisation and particularly assist the contractor-client communication. In the Scandinavian countries, a number of high-technology hospitals are currently being planned for and being built through partnering agreements with intentions of providing modern health care supported by advanced medical technology. Health care represents a complex structure of actors, resources and activities that are to be coordinated toward the purpose of providing relevant and consistent care services to individuals over time. The remaining project organisation embodies construction-related organisations that represent a temporarily organised constellation of actors, resources and activities in the design, production and delivery of the building. Thus, as construction “meets” health care in a construction project, there are very different requirements that are to be fulfilled; that of gaining benefits from temporarily organising around a construction project and that of having a facility that supports complex care processes over time. The differences in requirements in turn rests on the different logics of on the one hand temporary and on the other hand permanent organisations of a different set of activities, resources and actors. Through the industrial network approach (INA) we outline the interactions taking place between key actors in a large health care construction project practicing partnering in Sweden, and investigate how partnering affects the communication of these different logics in play. How is the interaction coloured by these different requirements and logics during the different project phases, and what is the role of partnering in creating a favourable setting for useful interaction?
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10.
  • Havenvid, Malena Ingemansson, et al. (författare)
  • A Resource Perspective on the Long-term Effects of project Partnering
  • 2020
  • Ingår i: Association of Researchers in Construction Management, ARCOM 2020 - Proceedings of the 36th Annual Conference.
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Project partnering has become an all the more established form for client-contractor collaboration. Although a well-reported phenomenon in the construction management literature, most studies focus on partnering practices in single projects and the immediate effects for the directly involved actors. Few investigations have studied the long-term effects of partnering, including both directly involved project actors and indirectly affected actors in relation to the constructed assets. If partnering is meant to enhance the quality of constructed assets, it should also improve their ability to support user activities. With the purpose of exploring the long-term effects of partnering in relation to interrelated projects and the various users of the constructed assets, the following research question is posed: what are the direct and indirect effects of project partnering on a long-term basis? To scrutinize this, a longitudinal case study covers a series of projects involving the same key actors and the subsequent operations of one of the constructed assets-a first of its kind proton radiation clinic in the Nordic countries. By mapping the involved actors’ resources across the projects and within a larger health care system, various effects are traced. A key conclusion is that the actors directly involved in partnering have the opportunity to reap several benefits from joint resource development within and across projects, while the actors using the constructed asset struggle in relating the developed resources within the projects to resources of the wider permanent context of the building in use.
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