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Student Hall’s Modular Construction Saves Time and Money

15 June 2011

Student Hall’s Modular Construction Saves Time and Money

By far the largest high-rise building in New Zealand to be assembled in modular fashion is six months away from completion at The University of Auckland.

The last of the 468 modular rooms, individually assembled 161 kilometres away in the Waikato, were being installed at University Hall in Whitaker Place this week.

The new hall, boosting the University’s fully catered accommodation by more than 60 percent, will open to students in early 2012.

“There is not a lot of modular building in New Zealand and certainly nothing on this scale,” says the University’s Property Services Director, Peter Fehl. “Not only is building faster, safer, and easier than conventional methods with fewer workers required on site but it is cheaper with better quality control.”

The prefabricated timber room pods, comprising 429 single bedrooms, 13 study pods and 13 double bedrooms for residential assistants, sit within a steel and concrete framework.


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Manufactured by Stanley Group in Matamata they were painted, fitted out with windows, doors, carpets and wooden furniture, prepared for electricity and computer links, and shrink-wrapped.

From late January they were taken to Auckland on truck and trailer units, lifted onto concrete floors by crane and stacked vertically three high between each concrete floor. Suspended timber floors were then constructed to connect all the rooms to corridors, bathrooms and lifts.

The 50-metre freestanding crane, the tallest of its kind in Australasia, was used to hoist each module into position. Lately modules have been inserted at the rate of nine a day.

Some 429 of the bedrooms are 12.5 square metres in size and there are 13 larger bedrooms with en suite bathrooms. Each of the 13 student accommodation floors has a central common room, study room, kitchenette and shared bathrooms.

University Hall will be clad with ceramic tiles. There will be extensive outdoor recreation facilities on two levels with an outdoor recreation court nearby.

Work by Hawkins Construction on the dual-tower hall began in May 2010. The project is on schedule notwithstanding the challenges of the steep site on the western slopes of Grafton Gully.

“The benefits of modular construction are evident in time alone,” says Peter Fehl. “Building has never lagged behind at any stage.”

ENDS

 
 
 
 
 
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