Ingenieur Vol.82 April-June2020 | Page 14

INGENIEUR productivity in a construction project and for the organisation itself. Waste Generation in the Construction Industry Construction contributes a significant amount of waste and is linked to many environmental issues. The generation of waste by the industry needs to be examined by looking into the whole life cycle of a building – planning, design and procurement; construction; occupancy; operation and maintenance; and renovation and demolition. In this context, managing construction waste includes: eliminating waste where possible; minimising waste where feasible; and reusing materials which might otherwise become waste. It is envisaged that waste management in the industry should consider a waste management hierarchy (Hamid, et. al. 2016). The construction sector is responsible for about 60% of material resources taken from nature, 50% of water and energy consumption, 50% of water pollution, 23% of air pollution and 50% of total generated waste. (Abo-Zaid & Othman, 2018). Statistical data shows 10-30% of waste generated originates from construction and demolition works. Urbanisation and rapid development in this day and age has resulted in a drastic growth in construction activities and hence, the amount of construction waste has increased. The Solid Waste and Public Cleansing Management Corporation of Malaysia (SWCorp) estimates that approximately 8 million tonnes of construction waste per year is generated from construction projects (Saadi, Ismail, & Alias, 2016). Therefore, waste represents a relatively high percentage of production costs and construction waste is one of the major factors that needs to be taken care of as it will eventually increase the cost of a project (Mydin, Khor, & Sani, 2014). Construction Waste Categories Construction wastes have a greater impact than labour, parts, supplies and equipment used in the production process. Waste in construction projects is defined as anything produced in the production process that may be considered damaged or defective and resources produced which cause direct or indirect costs and do not add any value to the final product (Abo-Zaid & Othman, 2018 and Mydin et al., 2014). The concept of lean management, derived from the Toyota Production System’s Toyota 3M Model, defines construction waste in three categories - Muda, Mura and Muri. The 3M Model Muda is a traditional Japanese word meaning waste arising from an activity that does not add value in the creation of a product or service for the customer. Muda costs money, consumes time and resources but does not add any value to the finished product. Muda includes non-value added activities in the production processes that are necessary for the end customers such as inspection and safety testing. It also non-value added activities that are unnecessary for the end customers which are categorised into seven types of waste – (1) Transportation, (2) Inventory, (3) Motion, (4) Waiting, (5) Overproduction, (6) Extra processing and (7) Defects (Do, 2017). Mura is the Japanese word for unevenness or inconsistency. In this context, inconsistent workloads in production or processing can lead to employees being overworked or idle and cause an accumulation of work in process and unnecessary levels of inventory. Therefore, the presence of Mura leads to Muda (Kanban Zone, 2019). Mura, however, can be avoided through Just-In-Time (JIT) systems. JIT uses the concept of delivering and producing the right part, in the right amount, and at the right time. It is a “pull-system” strategy that limit overproduction and avoid excess inventory. Muri is the Japanese term for “overburden”. It exists when people and machines are utilised 12 VOL 82 APRIL-JUNE 2020