Towards Sustainable Prefabrication: The Role of Lifecycle Supply Chain Collaboration in Cost Control and Resource Efficiency
Ting-Ya Hsieh, Yu-Min Yang, Hai-Dong Wei, Hsing-Wei Tai, Kuo-Tai ChengDecarbonising the built environment has increased the importance of prefabricated construction, yet its cost and resource efficiency are still constrained by fragmented supply chain collaboration. This study examines how lifecycle supply chain collaboration affects cost control performance in prefabricated construction. Based on supply chain management theory and expert consultation, a conceptual model was developed and tested through structural equation modelling using 517 valid responses from stakeholders in China’s prefabricated construction supply chain. The results show that management factors across all four project phases (decision and design, component production, transportation, and construction and installation) significantly improve cost control performance, with design standardisation, production scheduling, transport logistics, quality assurance, and workforce proficiency as key drivers. Process coordination exerts a significant mediating effect, while environmental factors significantly moderate the relationships. In practical terms, the findings indicate that stakeholders should prioritise design standardisation at the early stage, strengthen coordination across production, transport, and installation activities, and enhance quality control and workforce training to reduce avoidable cost overruns and resource waste. Beyond their theoretical contribution to research on supply chain collaboration in prefabricated construction, these results offer concrete direction for practitioners seeking to improve cost efficiency and make better use of resources within industrialised building systems.