You will develop a peer to peer information system for data sharing across stakeholders in the supply chain for digital product flows to accelerate the transition to a digitally integrated closed-loop supply chain for prefabricated modular construction.
Job Description This position is one of the two PhD positions offered within the Department of Industrial Engineering and Innovation Sciences (IE&ES) and the Department of the Built Environment (BE) of Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e). This PhD position is part of the research project
'Modular prefabricated construction: a circular asset management system for closed-loop supply and logistics chains' awarded within the TKI Dinalog innovation program for Construction Logistics and Mobile Equipment - Clean and Emission-Free Construction Logistics. The research project is aimed at accelerating the transition towards a circular economy through a digitally integrated closed-loop supply chain for prefabricated modular construction and focuses on three main goals: 1) a roadmap for transitioning to a digitally integrated circular supply/value chain,
2) a prototype digital twin for scenario analysis for off-site logistics planning, and 3) a prototype information system for digital product flows in the chain.
This PhD position is associated to the third goal, the networked information system for digital product flows. In this position, you will be working on the topic: Circular Asset Management System for Construction Logistics. Your role in this project will be to work on:
- design of a peer to peer information system that can enable data sharing across key stakeholders in the supply chain for digital product flows (Digital Product Platform - DPP)
- a service-oriented architecture that relies on Linked Building Data (LBD) and BIM modelling principles to perform asset management in a networked manner
- implementation of a working web-based DPP software prototype that can be brought to market
- research on the temporal aspect of materials travelling over time through the DPP, including take-back and track-and-trace models
This part of the research requires building a Digital Product Platform or DPP. This is a peer-to-peer system that can be hosted at a large number of locations (DPP nodes), yet maintains peer-to-peer connectivity and communication. At all times, it needs to be clear for relevant stakeholders (contractors, engineers, owners, architects), which materials in the region are at their disposal, where these materials can be found, and how they can be ported both to their own building and their own asset management system or building management system (BMS). The creation of this platform needs extensive research on BIM, construction logistics, applicable business models, Linked Building Data, decentralized P2P network architectures and data management over long periods of time. For this project, you will closely collaborate in a leading role with several construction and logistics companies in the Netherlands, in particular De Meeuw (
https://www.demeeuw.com/).
In this project, you will become part of two research groups at TUe, namely the Information Systems in the Built Environment (ISBE) group at the BE Department and the Operations, Planning, Accounting and Control Group (OPAC) at IE&ES. Not only will you be part of a challenging and innovative project, you will also be able to learn, apply and improve diverse data handling and web development techniques in support of the creation of future-proof and circular construction logistics. You will give shape to the project through your own research, as part of these two groups, and through MSc student research projects that take place in the associated companies.
In this PhD project, you will actively collaborate with several companies in the Netherlands to reshape construction logistics and support the digitalization of construction processes thus accelerating the transition towards a digitally integrated closed-loop construction process.
The construction sector is the biggest contributor to waste production, resources consumption and CO2 emissions due to energy intensive and polluting activities for material extraction, transportation, construction and demolition. With this research you will therefore contribute to the ambitious sustainability goals of a fully circular economy by 2050 set by the EU and the Dutch government.