Construction simulation has been an academic tool since the 1960's. There are over 20 construction programs in the U.S. and Canada that offer construction simulation as a
course at both the graduate and undergraduate levels.
Although simulation has proved a valuable teaching tool in the academic setting, use by practicing professionals has been limited. The construction industry has been reluctant
to consider this tool as a definitive aid for resource optimization and productivity improvement.
This paper presents an example of the successful use of simulation by a large international construction company. The objective of the paper is to better understand what factors have enabled this company to continuously and successfully implement construction simulation on
many of its projects.
%0 Journal Article
%1 halpin1999real
%A Halpin, Daniel W.
%A Martinez, Luis-Henrique
%B Proceedings of the 31st conference on Winter simulation: Simulation---a bridge to the future-Volume 2
%D 1999
%E Farrington, P. A.
%E Nembhard, H. B.
%E Sturrock, D. T.
%E Evans, G. W.
%K construction process simulation
%P 956-962
%T Real world applications of construction process simulation
%U http://scholar.google.com/scholar.bib?q=info:HVUaRBm0NZ4J:scholar.google.com/&output=citation&hl=en&oi=citation
%X Construction simulation has been an academic tool since the 1960's. There are over 20 construction programs in the U.S. and Canada that offer construction simulation as a
course at both the graduate and undergraduate levels.
Although simulation has proved a valuable teaching tool in the academic setting, use by practicing professionals has been limited. The construction industry has been reluctant
to consider this tool as a definitive aid for resource optimization and productivity improvement.
This paper presents an example of the successful use of simulation by a large international construction company. The objective of the paper is to better understand what factors have enabled this company to continuously and successfully implement construction simulation on
many of its projects.
@article{halpin1999real,
abstract = {Construction simulation has been an academic tool since the 1960's. There are over 20 construction programs in the U.S. and Canada that offer construction simulation as a
course at both the graduate and undergraduate levels.
Although simulation has proved a valuable teaching tool in the academic setting, use by practicing professionals has been limited. The construction industry has been reluctant
to consider this tool as a definitive aid for resource optimization and productivity improvement.
This paper presents an example of the successful use of simulation by a large international construction company. The objective of the paper is to better understand what factors have enabled this company to continuously and successfully implement construction simulation on
many of its projects.},
added-at = {2009-07-27T09:12:13.000+0200},
author = {Halpin, Daniel W. and Martinez, Luis-Henrique},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/23046d4318d12b3933361c3c105050c80/ioannest},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 31st conference on Winter simulation: Simulation---a bridge to the future-Volume 2},
editor = {Farrington, P. A. and Nembhard, H. B. and Sturrock, D. T. and Evans, G. W.},
interhash = {63371b89225d9147bc1219e0f26f2f04},
intrahash = {3046d4318d12b3933361c3c105050c80},
keywords = {construction process simulation},
organization = {ACM New York, NY, USA},
pages = {956-962},
timestamp = {2009-07-27T09:12:13.000+0200},
title = {Real world applications of construction process simulation},
url = {http://scholar.google.com/scholar.bib?q=info:HVUaRBm0NZ4J:scholar.google.com/&output=citation&hl=en&oi=citation},
year = 1999
}