Behind the sleek skyline of Tokyo is a super-efficient construction industry that operates complex projects with military precision and flawless co-ordination. James Clegg found out how it works
The Japanese construction industry operates with the stealth, precision and control of a ninja. In a recent report, Constructing Excellence gave it a score of 100% for productivity, compared with 50% for the UK. It found that projects in Japan were always on time, logistics were super-efficient and sites were so safe that workers did not need to wear steel-toed boots.
The findings were based on two trips to Japan during which the organisation visited sites run by the country鈥檚 five largest contractors: Shimizu, Kajima, Takenaka, Taisei and Obayashi. Each has a turnover of 拢4.5bn and together they account for 95% of all major building works in Japan. It found the projects had integrated teams of subcontractors, high levels of prefabrication and a military approach to logistical planning. Here are the some of the approaches that stood out 鈥
1 Training
Staff train for a full year before starting work on site. Tony Hyde, managing director of Thomas Vale, who was part of the delegation to Japan, says: 鈥淭hey go to a school where they are indoctrinated and trained in the business鈥 values.鈥 This is perhaps why staff retention is high. Most firms have a churn rate of 2%, mostly as a result of deaths and retirement.
2 Morning briefing
Every day at 7.45am the project manager briefs everyone on site, from team leaders to labourers, before work starts at 8am. The briefing typically ends with recitation of the site motto. On some sites this takes the form of a prayer to one of the gods of Shinto, Japan鈥檚 religion.
3 Warm up
Workers do calisthenics in the morning. Adrian Blumenthal, who is special projects director at Constructing Excellence and led the investigation, says: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if you鈥檇 be able to get UK brickies to limber-up in the morning, but work鈥檚 exercise and you need to warm up.鈥
4 Project board
The board is central to each project. It has a clock in its centre, includes a mission statement and health and safety information. It shows where everyone on site should be and when. Each day鈥檚 schedule is set during a planning meeting before lunchtime the previous day.
5 Vertical hoist
Rather than each subcontractor erecting its own external lift, one internal hoist in the centre of the building is used to transport workers and materials. Once the rest of the project is complete the hoist is taken down storey by storey. Filling the gap it leaves in each floor is the final step.
6 Waste control
Kajima typically segregates up to nine types of waste for recycling on each project, for instance timber, plastics and ferrous metal.
7 Health and safety
Constructing Excellence described Japanese attitudes to health and safety as 鈥減ragmatic鈥.
鈥淪ome thought health and safety was an issue but it鈥檚 not,鈥 says Blumenthal. 鈥淔or instance, people don鈥檛 wear steel-toed boots, but that鈥檚 because the way sites are organised means there鈥檚 hardly any debris, so there鈥檚 little chance of dropping anything on your feet.鈥
The effectiveness of this approach is clear 鈥 92% of projects in Japan achieve a zero-accident rate, compared with 62% of UK schemes.
8 Customer service
There is a big emphasis on customer satisfaction. Most projects are completed on time and without defects, the report said, though no percentage was given. This was put down to the traditional concept of 鈥渉onour鈥, as well as more prosaic reasons.
Henry Loo, another delegation member who worked as a project manager for Kajima in the UK during the nineties says: 鈥淚n effect, the people on site are the marketing team. They know if they screw up this project they won鈥檛 see another.鈥
It is also enshrined in Japanese law that a contractor is liable for any defects in a building for up to two years after it has been delivered.
9 Profit
Despite beating the UK industry in most key performance indicators, including productivity, client satisfaction and safety, Japanese construction more or less equals it in profitability. The five biggest contractors have an average profit margin of 2.9%. Constructing Excellence reckons this could be explained by Japan鈥檚 lengthy economic downturn and a reduction in public spending on infrastructure, when compared to the eighties and nineties (in 1991 the average margin was 5.2%). It could also be because the Japanese plough more money into research.
10 Off-site building
Japanese drawings are of such good quality and detail that most components can be built off-site in a factory. Constructing Excellence found that engineering on any element could be carried out in a supplier鈥檚 workshop. High levels of prefabrication make Japanese sites more efficient and maximise the potential for good quality control.
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