The manufacturing industry is experiencing the 4th Industrial Revolution, also known as Industry 4.0. It encapsulates cyber-physical systems (i.e., combining sensing, computation, control and networking into physical objects and infrastructure) integrated towards digitalization and automation of the manufacturing sector. The construction industry has also benefited from these technologies, which go by Construction 4.0. Despite the construction industry often being blamed for its reluctance to implement emerging technologies and non-traditional management methods, recent research attempted to integrate Industry 4.0 emerging technologies to keep up with the manufacturing sector. This shows that academia and industry need each other’s hand-in-hand support in order to implement these technological advances. This study investigates the status of Construction 4.0 technologies adoption in academia and industry in the United States of America (USA) and measures the level of collaboration. Relevant data is collected via web-based questionnaire surveys that are distributed to academia and industry professionals within the USA to inquire about the status of construction 4.0 technologies and their adoption rate. The collected data are analyzed and important findings are reported in this paper. The results show that around 61% of the professionals from academia and 33% from industry are fully or somehow familiar with the term – ‘Construction 4.0’. There has been significant adoption of BIM, laser scanners, and drones in each sector. The rest of the technologies show potential in upcoming years, and academia and industry have methods in place of updating the workforce on new technologies. However, a lack of collaboration has been observed as 50% of the respondents reported no ongoing or past research projects between academia and industry in this domain. It is hoped that the findings of this research will help both academia and industry to join forces to modernize the construction industry.
Published on 03/10/23
Submitted on 03/10/23
DOI: 10.23967/c.dbmc.2023.089
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license
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