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Preface ... 2

Organising Committee ... 3

International Scientific Committee ... 4

About International Council for Research and

Innovation in Building and Construction (CIB) ... 8

About Department of Building and Real Estate (BRE), PolyU ... 9

Congress Schedule ... 10

Officiating Guests of Honour ... 12

Keynote Speakers ... 13

Master Programme Schedule

Day 1 - 17 June 2019 ... 21

Day 2 - 18 June 2019 ... 22

Day 3 - 19 June 2019 ... 23

Day 4 - 20 June 2019 ... 24

General Information

PolyU Campus Map ... 45

Floor Plans ... 46

Welcoming Dinner ... 49

Places of Interest ... 50

About Hong Kong ... 52

Sponsors & Supporting Organisations ... 53

Table of Contents

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Preface

The CIB World Building Congress 2019 (CIB WBC 2019) is jointly hosted by the International Council for Research and Innovation in Building and Construction (CIB) and the Department of Building and Real Estate (BRE) of The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU). Held in different countries on a triennial basis, the CIB WBC is recognised as a globally leading construction research and innovation conference. BRE is very honoured to host the CIB WBC 2019 as it is the first time ever to organise this triennial congress in Hong Kong. From 17 to 21 June 2019, the CIB WBC 2019 draws over 400 overseas and local corporate leaders, public policymakers, researchers and professionals who are eager to gain state-of-art approaches and diverse perspectives from foremost academic authorities and internationally renowned experts in the fields of surveying, engineering, town planning, construction management, property management and built environment, etc.

Led by the theme ‘Constructing Smart Cities’, the CIB WBC 2019 provides an ideal platform to keep your fingers on the pulse of the smart city development and its role in society. This triennial congress focuses on 8 sub-themes: • Smart Utilities and Facilities Management • Smart Governance, Policy and Economy • Smart Environment • Smart Service • Smart Buildings and Infrastructure • Smart Transportation and Mobility • Smart People and Living • Smart Planning, Design and Construction

In addition to 8 keynote speeches from the policymaker, leading scholars and practitioners on different aspects of smart city, the CIB WBC 2019 consists of nearly 50 parallel sessions on the 8 sub-themes, together with CIB Working Commission/Task Group meetings, CIB coordinator assembly meetings, CIB commission meetings, technical workshops and CIB Student Chapter competition. The success of the CIB WBC2019 was due to the collective efforts of many people. We would like to express our greatest thanks to our guests of honour, namely, Ir Prof. Alex Wai, Vice President (Research Development) of PolyU, Ms Chelydra Percy, Vice President, CIB Board and Sr Chan Ka Kui, SBS, JP, Chairman of the Hong Kong Construction Industry Council (CIC). Also, we thank the members of the Organizing Committee for their dedication to this congress. And we appreciate the contribution of the International Scientific Committee and CIB Working Commission/Task Group coordinators to peer reviews of over 460 papers. Many thanks to our honorable keynote speakers and session chairs for sharing their work and insights at the congress.

Also, we would like to thank our sponsors including CIC and the Urban Renewal Authority (URA), supporting organizations, CIB, the Faculty of Construction and Environment (FCE) of PolyU, and BRE for their tremendous support and dedication. We also thank the 6 academic journals for publishing our selected papers as special issues. The congress is financially supported by the Construction Innovation and Technology Fund (CITF), which is established by the Development Bureau of the Hong Kong Government and administered by CIC.

We hope all of you enjoy the CIB WBC 2019 and all the best!

Dr. Kevin Goheen

CEO

International Council for Research and Innovation in Building and Construction

Ir Prof. You-Lin Xu

Dean of Faculty of Construction and Environment Yim, Mak, Kwok & Chung Professor in Smart Structures

Chair Professor of Structural Engineering The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Ir Prof. Albert P.C. Chan

Head of Department of Building and Real Estate Associate Director of the Research Institute for Sustainable Urban Development

Chair Professor of Construction Engineering and Management

The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Prof. Meng Ni

Chairman of the Organising Committee of CIB WBC 2019

Professor, Humboldt Fellow

Associate Head (Research) of Department of Building and Real Estate

The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Prof. Patrick T.I. LAM

Chairman of the Scientific Committee of CIB WBC 2019

Professor of Department of Building and Real Estate

Award Coordinator for MSc / PgD in Project Management Programme

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Organising Committee

Chairman

Prof. Meng NI

Chairman of the Scientific Committee

Prof. Patrick LAM

Secretary

Ms Christine YEUNG

Members

(in alphabetical order)

Emeritus Professor Mike ANSON

Mr. Neil Zhao CHEN

Dr. Yat Hung CHIANG

Dr. Orianna GUO

Dr. Minkoo KIM

Mr. Xiao LI

Dr. JoonOh SEO

Dr. Michael SING

Dr. Francis SIU

Dr. Yi SUN

Dr. Yongtao TAN

Dr. Jayantha WADU MESTHRIGE

Dr. Hsi-Hsien WEI

Dr. Ivy WONG

Dr. Esther YUNG

Mr. Zhenyu ZHANG

[Note: a special note of appreciation for the leadership of Dr. Francis WONG (now with CIC) at the early stage of the

congress preparation]

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International Scientific Committee

First Name Family Name Reviewer's University/Company/Institute Location

Patrick Lam (Chairman) The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China

Masaru Abuku Kindai University Japan

Dimitrios Aggelis Vrije Universiteit Brussel Belgium Syed M. Ahmed Eastern Carolina University USA Changbum R. Ahn University of Nebraska Lincoln USA Ajibade Aibinu University of Melbourne Australia

Amir Alavi University of Missouri USA

Miguel Amado Universidade NOVA de Lisboa Portugal Robert Amor The University of Auckland New Zealand Per Anker Jensen Technical University of Denmark Denmark Michael Anson The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Chimay Anumba University of Florida USA

Aaron M. Anvuur Loughborough University UK David Arditi Illinois Institute of Technology USA Mohammad Arif Kamal Aligarh Muslim University India Mounir Asmar Arizona State University USA William P. Bahnfleth The Pennsylvania State University USA Michael Batty University College London UK Michael Behm East Carolina University USA Umberto Berardi Ryerson University Canada Janis Birkeland The University of Melbourne Australia Wahidul Biswas Curtin University Australia Peter Brandon University of Salford UK Christian Brockmann University of Applied Sciences Bremen Germany Andrew Brown Edinburgh Napier University UK

Sunliang Cao The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China David Carmichael University of New South Wales Australia Daniel W.M. Chan The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Edwin Hon-wan Chan The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Christopher Chao Hong Kong University of Science and Technology HKSAR, China

Tin-Chih Toly Chen National Chiao Tung University Taiwan, Republic of China Jack C. P. Cheng Hong Kong University of Science and Technology HKSAR, China

Sai On Cheung City University of Hong Kong HKSAR, China Hung-Lin Chi The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China

Chien Cheng Chou National Central University Taiwan, Republic of China Chia Fah Choy Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman Malaysia

David K.H. Chua National University of Singapore Singapore Eng. Raffale Cioffi Materials Science Engineering Research Group Italy

D.J. Croome University of Reading UK

Elizabeth Deakin University of California at Berkeley USA

You Dong The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Chrisna Du Plesis University of Pretoria South Africa Peter Edwards RMIT University Australia Palaneeswaran Ekambaram Swinburne University of Technology Australia Abbas Elmualim Sustainable Built Environments Australia Semiha (Kiziltas) Ergan Carnegie Mellon University USA Esin Ergen Istanbul Technical University Turkey Dong Ping Fang Tsinghua University China Roger Flanagan University of Reading UK

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International Scientific Committee

First Name Family Name Reviewer's University/Company/Institute Location

Dai Fei West Virginia University USA

Gianluigi Ferrari University of Parma Italy Young Yun Geun Kyung Hee University Korea Jeremy Gibberd Council for Scientific and Industrial Research South Africa Francesca Giglio Mediterranea University of Reggio Calabria Italy

Morten Gjerde Victoria University of Wellington New Zealand Yang Miang Goh National University of Singapore Singapore Stuart Green University of Reading UK Suat Gunhan University of Texas at San Antonio USA Leif Gustavsson Linnaeus University Sweden

Jun Han Heriot Watt University UK

Carl Thomas Michael Haas University of Waterloo Canada Andreas Hartmann University of Twente Netherlands

Makarand Hastak Purdue University USA

Per Heiselberg Aalborg University Denmark Jan Hensen Technische Universiteit Eindhoven Netherlands Chris Heywood University of Melbourne Australia Paul H. K. Ho City University of Hong Kong HKSAR, China Adeli Hojjat The Ohio State University USA

Tian Zhen Hong Building Technology Department Simulation Research Group

USA Hai Jun Huang Beihang University China

Qian Huang Purdue University USA

Ben Richard Hughes University of Sheffield UK Bon-Gang Hwang National University of Singapore Singapore Khaled H. Hyari Hashemite University USA Mohammed Imbabi University of Aberdeen UK Goksenin Inalhan Istanbul Technical Univesity Turkey Arshad Ali Javed Massey University New Zealand David J o a q u í n D e l g a d o

-Hernandez

Autonomous University of the State of Mexico Mexico Keith Jones Anglia Ruskin University UK

Philip Jones Cardiff University UK

Takashi Kaneta Kyoto University Japan

Dean Kashiwagi Arizona State University USA Yongjian Ke University of Technology Sydney Australia MinKoo Kim The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Mohan Kumaraswamy University of Hong Kong (Honorary) HKSAR, China

Kevin Lai National Cheng-Kung University Taiwan, Republic of China Hung-kit, Joseph Lai The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China

Boeing Singh Laishram Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati India

Edmond W.M. Lam The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Fiona Lamari Queensland University of Technology Australia Sandeep Langar University of Southern Mississippi USA Sarel Lavy Texas A&M University USA Steffen Lehmann University of Portsmouth UK Fernanda Leite University of Texas at Austin USA

Heng Li The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China

Yu-Pin Lin National Taiwan University Taiwan, Republic of China Göran Lindahl Chalmers University of Technology Sweden

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International Scientific Committee

First Name Family Name Reviewer's University/Company/Institute Location

Kim Hiang Liow National University of Singapore Singapore John Richard Littlewood Cardiff Metropolitan University UK Min Liu North Carolina State University USA

Chun Hua Liu City University of Hong Kong HKSAR, China Patrizia Lombardi The Interuniversity Department of Regional and Urban

Studies and Planning

Italy Peter E.D. Love Curtin University of Technology Australia

Yujie Lu Tongji University China

Wilson Lu University of Hong Kong HKSAR, China Xiao Wei Luo City University of Hong Kong HKSAR, China Ashwin Mahalingam Indian Institute of Technology India

Javad Majrouhi Sardroud Azad University Central Tehran Branch Iran

Cheuk-ming Mak The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Alexi Marmot University College London UK

Carol Menassa University of Michigan USA Giovanni Migliaccio University of Washington USA Edward Minchin University of Florida USA Yasser Mohamed University of Alberta Canada Benedetto Nastasi Delft University of Technology Netherlands Madhav Nepal Queensland University of Technology Australia Edward Ng The Chinese University of Hong Kong HKSAR, China Thomas Ng University of Hong Kong HKSAR, China Meng Ni The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Jian-lei Niu The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Masa Noguchi University of Melbourne Australia Ehsan Noroozinejad Farsangi Kerman Graduate University of Advanced Technology Iran Jorge Ochoa Paniagua University of South Australia Australia Joseph Ooi National University of Singapore Singapore

Ryozo Ooka University of Tokyo Japan

Kaan Ozbay New York University USA

Markos Papageorgiou Technical University of Crete Greece Prachand Man Pradhan Kathmandu University Nepal Pramen Prasad Shrestha University of Nevada, Las Vegas USA Jeff Rankin University of New Brunswick Canada

Motiar Rahman Universiti Teknologi Brunei Brunei Darussalam Ehsan Rezazadeh Azar Lakehead University Canada

Richard Roger Bruno University of Montreal Canada Steve Rowlinson The University of Hong Kong HKSAR, China Ziqin Sang W u h a n R e s e a r c h I n s t i t u t e O f P o s t s A n d

Telecommunications

China

Sevil Sariyildiz TU Delft Netherlands

JoonOh Seo The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Isam Shahrour University Lille1 - Science and Technology France Johnson Xuesong Shen University of New South Wales Australia

S.A. Sherif University of Florida USA

Michael Sing The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Martin Skitmore Queensland University of Technology Australia Lucio Soibelman University of Southern California USA Xinyi Song Georgia Institute of Technology USA Ravi Srinivasan University of Florida USA

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International Scientific Committee

First Name Family Name Reviewer's University/Company/Institute Location

Issam Srour American University of Beirut Lebanon Yuehong Su University of Nottingham UK Low Sui Pheng National University of Singapore Singapore Agachai Sumalee The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Nang-ngai, Tony Sze The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Wai Yuen Szeto The University of Hong Kong HKSAR, China

Izuru Takewaki Kyoto University Japan

Vivian Tam The University of Western Australia Australia Yukio Tamura Tokyo Polytechnic University Japan Willie Tan National University of Singapore Singapore

Yong Tao Tan RMIT University Australia

Ai Lin Teo National University of Singapore Singapore Tsoutsos Theocharis Technical University of Crete Polytechneioupolis Greece Ali Touran Northeastern University USA Theo van der Voordt Delft University of Technology Netherlands

Barry Varcoe University of Oxford UK

Romeu Vicente University of Aveiro Portugal Francesco Viti University of Luxembourg Luxembourg Ron Wakefield RMIT University Australia Pan Wei The University of Hong Kong HKSAR, China Hsi-Hsien Wei The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Ing Liang Wong Glasglow Caledonian University UK

Ivy Siu Wai Wong The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Ling-Tim Wong The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Yong Xia The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Bo Xia Queensland University of Technology Australia

Xudong Yang Tsinghua University China

Shi Ming Yu National University of Singapore Singapore Esther Hiu Kwan Yung The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China John Zacharias Peking University China Tarek Zayed The Hong Kong Polytechnic University HKSAR, China Radu Zmeureanu Concordia Unviersity Canada

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About International Council for Research and Innovation

in Building and Construction (CIB)

About CIB

CIB is the acronym of the abbreviated French (former) name: “Conseil International du Bâtiment” (in English this is: International Council for Building). In the course of 1998, the abbreviation has been kept but the full name changed into:

International Council for Research and Innovation in Building and Construction

CIB was established in 1953 as an Association whose objectives were to stimulate and facilitate international cooperation and information exchange between governmental research institutes in the building and construction sector, with an emphasis on those institutes engaged in technical fields of research.

CIB has since developed into a world wide network of over 5,000 experts from about 500 member organisations with a research, university, industry or government background, who collectively are active in all aspects of research and innovation for building and construction.

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About The Department of Building and Real Estate (BRE)

About Department of Building and Real Estate (BRE), PolyU

In 1937, the Department of Building and Real Estate of the then Hong Kong Polytechnic, embarked on its journey of educating and preparing students for professional careers in the Construction and Real Estate industries. The Department has a distinguished history in this respect, its alumni having contributed mightily, over 80 years, to the built Hong Kong we see today. The Department enjoys international recognition for its academic and research excellence based on its multi-disciplinary team of Academic Staff, expert in surveying, engineering, construction industry health and safety, town planning, building technology, real estate, finance, law and economics. The postgraduate and undergraduate BRE programmes produce over 500 graduates each year.

Aiming to address the complex challenges of today with practical solutions for the industry, the Department undertakes high quality research projects primarily focused on the areas Construction Health and Safety, Sustainable Urban Systems and Digital Construction.

According to the recent QS World University ranking, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University ranked 20th in the world in the subject ‘Architecture/Built Environment’. Tapping into opportunities within the region and beyond, the Department continues to build on its strengths, to transcend frontiers and advance knowledge in the pursuit of sustainable built environments.

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Congress Schedule

Day 1

17 June 2019 Monday

Time

Event

Venue

8:30am – 9:45am CIB Officers Committee Meetings

ZS701, Block Z 10:00am –12:00nn CIB Board Meeting

9:00am – 2:30pm CIB Commission Meetings 2/F or 5/F, Block Z 3:30pm – 5:00pm CIB Coordinators Assembly Z206, Block Z

5:00pm – 7:00pm Registration Foyer, Jockey Club

Auditorium 6:00 pm – 7:00pm Cocktail Reception

Day 2

18 June 2019 Tuesday

Time

Event

Venue

8:00am – 11:00am Registration

Jockey Club Auditorium 9:00am – 10:15am Opening Ceremony

Welcoming Speech by Ir Prof. Alex Wai

Vice President (Research Development) The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Ms Chelydra Percy

Vice President CIB Board

Sr Chan Ka Kui, SBS, JP

Chairman

Hong Kong Construction Industry Council

9:45am – 10:15am Keynote Session Mr. Raymond Lee, JP

Director of Planning, HKSAR Government

Topic: Application of Innovation and Technology in Smart Planning 10:15am – 10:45am Keynote Session

Dr Miimu Airaksinen

Managing Director and CEO, RIL Finnish Association of Civil Engineers

Topic: Smart Buildings and Infrastructures enabling sustainable transformation towards zero carbon societies

11:00am – 11:30am Tea Break

Block Z 11:30am – 1:00pm Parallel Sessions

1:00pm – 2:30pm Lunch Break 2:30pm – 4:00pm Parallel Sessions 4:00pm – 4:30pm Tea Break 4:30pm – 6:00pm Parallel Sessions 10:30am – 6:00pm Poster Sessions

7:00pm Welcoming Dinner 7/F, L’Hotel Nina et

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Congress Schedule

Day 3

19 June 2019 Wednesday

Time

Event

Venue

9:30am – 10:00am Keynote Session Prof. Mei-Po Kwan

Professor and Director of Space-Time Analysis and Research Lab (StarLab)

Department of Geography and Geographic Information Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Topic: Business Applications of Smart Geospatial Technologies in Human Mobility and Health Research

Z209

10:00am – 10:30am Keynote Session Prof. Xiao-yan Li

Professor, Department of Civil Engineering, The University of Hong Kong

Topic: Enhanced Separation and Sludge Refinery for Wastewater Treatment – Solving the Nexus of Pollution Control and Resource Recovery in Mega Cities

Z209

10:30am – 11:00am Tea Break

Block Z 11:00am –12:30pm Parallel Sessions

12:30pm – 2:00pm Lunch Break 2:00pm – 2:30pm Keynote Session

Prof. M. Mercedes Maroto-Valer

Buchan Chair in Sustainable Energy Engineering, Assistant Deputy Principal (Research and Innovation), Director of the Research Centre for Carbon Solutions (RCCS), Heriot-Watt University

Topic: Low-carbon systems for smart cities

Z209

2:40pm – 4:00pm Parallel Sessions

Block Z 4:00pm – 4:30pm Tea Break

4:10pm – 6:10pm CIB General Assembly Z207

4:30pm – 6:00pm Parallel Sessions

Block Z 10:30am – 6:00pm Poster Sessions

Day 4

20 June 2019 Thursday

Time

Event

Venue

9:30 am – 10:00 am Keynote Session

(Original) Prof. Les Ruddock

Chair in Construction and Property Management, University of Salford

Topic: Transforming the conventional urban economy to a smart economy: Understanding the changing role of built assets

(Stand-in) Prof Chrsina Du Plessis

Head of Department of Architecture University of Pretoria, South Africa

Topic: Smart Cities - the Promises and the Pitfalls Z209 10:00am – 10:30am Keynote Session

Prof. Roger Flanagan

Professor, School of Construction Management and Engineering, University of Reading

Topic: Disrupt or be disrupted-“Moments of truth” in the smart delivery of professional services in the construction sector

10:30am – 11:00am Tea Break

Block Z 11:00am –12:30pm Parallel Sessions

12:30pm – 2:00 pm Lunch Break 2:00pm – 2:30pm Keynote Session

Prof. Vineet Kamat

Professor of Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Michigan

Topic: Closed-Loop Design-Fabrication through Digital-Twins of Adaptive Co-Robotized Construction Work

Z209

2:40pm – 4:10pm Parallel Sessions

Block Z 4:10pm – 4:30pm Tea Break

10:30am – 4:00pm Poster Sessions 4:30pm – 5:00pm Closing Ceremony

Jockey Club Auditorium Closing Remarks by

Prof. Patrick Lam

Chairman of Scientific Committee

Announcement by Dr. Keith Hampson

Vice President, CIB Board

Dr. Kevin Goheen

CEO of CIB

Prof. Ron Wakefield

Chair of Marketing & Communications Committee

Student Chapter Award Presentation

Day 5

21 June 2019 Friday

Time

Event

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Officiating Guests of Honour

Ir Prof. Alex Wai

Vice President (Research Development)

The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Ms Chelydra Percy

Vice President

CIB Board

Sr Chan Ka Kui, SBS, JP

Chairman

Hong Kong Construction Industry Council

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Keynote Speaker

About the Speaker

Dr. Miimu Airaksinen works as CEO and Managing Director at RIL Finnish Association of Civil Engineers. Before she joined RIL she worked over 10 years as a research professor in Technical Research Centre of Finland, VTT. She is currently active in European Innovation Platform for Smart Cities and Communities. At the moment she leads a CIB (International Council for Research and Innovation in Building and Construction) task group for smart cities, in addition she is CIB board member. She was also nominated to UN habitat policy advisor for group 9 focusing on smart cities. Airaksinen is also working as a domain expert in European Cooperation in the field of Scientific and Technical Research, COST, Transport and Urban Development.

Smart Buildings and Infrastructures enabling sustainable

transformation towards zero carbon societies

Abstract

Buildings are an essential element of a Smart City infrastructure. Buildings have, as other city structures, a huge impact on environmental impact and on peoples well-being. In addition buildings and infrastructures have an active role in the communications and services. An intelligent building integrates technology and processes to create a facility that is safer, more comfortable and productive for its occupants. At same time it needs to be operationally efficient for its owners. Advanced technology – combined with improved processes for design, construction and operations – provides a superior indoor environment that improves occupant comfort and productivity while reducing energy consumption and operation staffing.

Smart design, operation and management enabled by building information models (BIM) based processes and integration with advanced building energy management systems (BEMS), helps to communicate with different stakeholders and create better mutual understanding. Visualisation of different buildings and urban space properties enhance the options to create better living and working environments. Buildings are connected to their environment; also inside the building different components are interacting. Therefore it is evidently very important to use multi-target optimization for a holistic optimal performance. This optimisation is not only done for technical performance but also for user experience.

This presentation shows real life examples about smart buildings and infrastuctures and their impact.

Dr. Miimu AIRAKSINEN

CEO and Managing Director

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Keynote Speaker

About the Speaker

Roger Flanagan is Professor at the School of Construction Management and Engineering, University of Reading, UK. He is an Honorary Professor at Tsinghua University, Beijing, and Guest Professor at Chongqing University, Guiyang Institute of Technology. Visiting Professor at Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, and University of New South Wales, Australia. Previously Visiting Professor at the University of Hong Kong, and in USA, Sweden, Norway, Kenya, South Africa, Turkey, and Croatia. He is a member of the Association for Consulting and Engineering Advisory Board. He was President of the Chartered Institute of Building in 2007.

Roger’s industrial experience includes previously being a member of the Board of Directors of Skanska AB and a non-executive member of the Board of Directors of Halcrow Group (now Jacobs). He has been a member of Board of Directors and Advisory Board member in USA, Hong Kong, South Africa, Switzerland, Canada, and UK.

He has experience of working in UK, Middle East, USA, Canada, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Disrupt or be disrupted-“Moments of truth” in the smart delivery

of professional services in the construction sector

Abstract

Construction industry professional service providers must respond to the increasing size, scope, and complexity of construction projects. They need to create a more integrated, efficient, safer, and higher quality industry through the delivery of smart services. The choice is to disrupt or be disrupted by technologies, by clients, and by stakeholders seeking more certainty, safer, faster delivery, with better quality throughout. Big companies are getting bigger by acquisition and merger to cope with the changing world, which is blurring the boundaries between the professions. Smart services is about delivering professional services in a smarter way, by embracing the digital age and changing the way design, off-site component manufacture and assembly, site production, and maintenance of the built environment is undertaken. “Moments of truth” are happening in the delivery of professional services with artificial intelligence, Blockchain, immersed reality, and many new technologies changing the traditional way of delivering services. Companies need to face reality; they must disrupt or be disrupted by being smart.

Prof. Roger FLANAGAN

Professor

School of Construction Management and Engineering

University of Reading, UK

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Keynote Speaker

About the Speaker

Prof. Vineet Kamat is Professor and John L. Tishman Faculty Scholar in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of Michigan. Prof. Kamat’s research is primarily focused on Automation and Robotics, Virtual and Augmented Reality Visualization, Simulation, Mobile Computing, and their applications in the construction and operation of smart and connected cities. Prof. Kamat was awarded the 2015 Walter L. Huber Civil Engineering Research Prize by the American Society of Civil Engineers. He has also received the Daniel W. Halpin Award for scholarship in construction from the American Society of Civil Engineers; two Outstanding Researcher Awards from FIATECH; and two Outstanding Young Alumnus Awards from the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and the Myers-Lawson School of Construction at Virginia Tech. He has also received three ASCE Best Paper Awards, from the Journal of Computing in Civil Engineering, and the Construction Research Congress, and two Best Paper Awards from the International Association for Automation and Robotics in Construction (IAARC). Prof. Kamat is an Associate Editor of the ASCE Journal of Computing in Civil Engineering and a member of the editorial board for the journal Automation in Construction and the journal Advanced Engineering Informatics. He has served as the Chair of the ASCE Construction Institute’s Construction Research Council, and as a Member of the Board of Governors of the ASCE Construction Institute. He has also served as the Chair of the ASCE Visualization, Information Modeling and Simulation committee. Prof. Kamat’s research has been extensively published in peer-reviewed journal publications and conference papers. He has also presented his work in invited talks throughout the world and has organised several technical sessions on construction visualization and robotics at major conferences in his field of research. Prof. Kamat received a Ph.D. in Civil Engineering at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in 2003; a MS in Civil Engineering at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in 2000; and a BE degree in Civil Engineering from Goa University in India in 1998.

Closed-Loop Design-Fabrication through Digital-Twins of

Adaptive Co-Robotized Construction Work

Abstract

Unlike manufacturing robots, whose kinematics are pre-programmed based on robust metrology, tight tolerances, and rigid workpieces, construction robots operate under conditions of imperfect metrology, loose tolerances, and large workpiece uncertainties. Despite having access to a designed Building Information Model (BIM), construction robots must sense and model their actual environment, and adapt their kinematic plan to compensate for deviations from the expected. This talk will present methods to enable the autonomous sensing and modeling of construction objects so construction robots can ultimately adapt to unexpected circumstances and perform quality work. To that end, two construction component model fitting techniques are introduced, namely the Clustering and Iterative Closest Point (CICP) construction component model fitting technique and the Generalized Resolution Correlative Scan Matching (GRCSM) construction component model fitting technique. The GRCSM construction component model-fitting technique employs the presented GRCSM search algorithm, which is a modified version of the existing Multi-Resolution Correlative Scan Matching (MRCSM) algorithm. Experiments are presented to evaluate the ability of the CICP and GRCSM construction component model fitting techniques to model construction features. It is shown that the CICP and GRCSM construction component model fitting techniques are capable of estimating the pose and geometry of arbitrarily shaped objects and construction joints. The CICP and GRCSM construction component model fitting techniques enable real-time digital twins of adaptive robotized construction processes and offer the possibility of closing the design-fabrication loop through the geometric estimation of construction features, especially for situations involving full automation, detailed construction work, incomplete sensor data, and complex object geometry.

Prof. Vineet KAMAT

Professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering

University of Michigan

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Keynote Speaker

About the Speaker

Mei-Po Kwan is Professor of Geography and Geographic Information Science and Director of the Space-Time Analysis and Research (STAR) Laboratory at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She received her Ph.D. from the University of California at Santa Barbara. She had served as an editor of Annals of the American Association of Geographers for 12 years and is editor of the book series entitled SAGE Advances in Geographic Information Science and Technology.

Kwan has received many prestigious honors and awards, including the Distinguished Scholarship Honors, the E. Willard and Ruby S. Miller Award, and the Stanley Brunn Award for Creativity in Geography from the American Association of Geographers (AAG); the Alan Hay Award in Transport Geography from the Transport Geography Research Group of the Royal Geographical Society with the Institute of British Geographers (RGS-IBG); the Distinguished Scholar Award from the International Association of Chinese Professionals in Geographic Information Sciences (CPGIS); the University Consortium for Geographic Information Science (UCGIS) Research Award; the Edward L. Ullman Award from the AAG Transportation Geography Specialty Group; and the Melinda S. Meade Distinguished Scholarship Award from the AAG Health and Medical Geography Specialty Group. She was recognised in 2009 as a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). In 2016 she was named a fellow by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.

Kwan has received about US$25 million support as PI or co-PI from sources including the U.S. National Institutes of Health, the U.S. National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Transportation, and the National Natural Science Foundation of China. She has published 37 edited or co-edited volumes and over 200 peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters. She has delivered over 200 keynote addresses and invited lectures in 18 countries. She has served as an advisory panelist or reviewer of grant proposals for 14 U.S. National Science Foundation programs, U.S. National Institutes of Health, European Research Council, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Australian Research Council, Austrian Science Fund, Research Foundation of Flanders, Royal Geographical Society (U.K.), Research Grants Council of Hong Kong, and Swiss National Science Foundation.

Kwan's research interests include environmental health, sustainable cities, human mobility, urban/social issues in cities, and GIScience. She has made ground-breaking contributions to these areas. Her recent collaborative projects include the development of a unified cyberinfrastructure framework for scalable spatiotemporal data analytics, and examination of the health risks of female sex workers, adolescent and adult participation in high risk drug use, individual exposure to air pollution, and environmental influences on physical activity.

Business Applications of Smart Geospatial Technologies in

Human Mobility and Health Research

Abstract

Human mobility is an essential element of people’s spatiotemporal experiences, and these experiences can be understood using smart geospatial technologies and big data. With the advent of new geospatial technologies like mobile sensing and GPS tracking, vast amount of complex spatiotemporal data can be collected. However, human behaviors that can be revealed by these data have not been fully explored or understood. In this presentation, I discuss new methods developed for this purpose. I draw upon recent conceptual and methodological developments to examine how a perspective that integrates the spatial and temporal dimensions and takes human mobility into account can help identify the relevant spatiotemporal context that influences people’s health behaviors or outcomes. Using examples from my recent projects, I discuss how the collection and analysis of high-resolution space-time data enabled by advanced geospatial and mobile technologies can provide new insights on smart health and mobility, including the relationships between people’s health behaviors and the complex spatiotemporal dynamics of environmental influences.

Prof. Mei-Po KWAN

Professor and Director of Space-Time Analysis and Research Lab (StarLab)

Department of Geography and Geographic Information Science

(19)

Keynote Speaker

About the Speaker

Mr Raymond Lee, JP has been appointed as the Director of Planning in the Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region since November 2016. He is the Chairman of the Metro Planning Committee and Rural & New Town Planning Committee of the Town Planning Board. He is also a member of the Planners Registration Board. From late October 2012 to May 2014, Mr Lee was the Head of Energizing Kowloon East Office responsible for facilitating the transformation of Kowloon East into another core business district of Hong Kong. He was the Secretary to the Town Planning Board from May 2014 to November 2016.

Mr Lee has extensive experiences in town planning. He has previously been involved in planning for the old airport site at Kai Tak, review of the Town Planning Ordinance, harbour-front planning and development, boundary closed area and cross-boundary planning, and planning for new development areas in the New Territories.

Application of Innovation and Technology in Smart Planning

Abstract

With the release of the “Smart City Blueprint for Hong Kong” in December 2017 and the emerging global trend of wider use of innovation and technology, the Planning Department (PlanD) has put forward different initiatives to support the smart city development.

In the presentation, Mr. Raymond Lee, JP the Director of Planning, will share the vision of adopting a “Smart, Green and Resilient (SGR) City Strategy” to help shaping the future development of Hong Kong. Under the SGR Strategy, PlanD has continued to adopt and develop various smart initiatives in its planning work, including the release of planning-related data; setting up of platforms/systems for dissemination of statutory and non-statutory geospatial planning information; and the use of innovative and evolving technology such as Unmanned Aerial System and “3D Planning and Design System” to facilitate and enhance planning work. In addition, he will demonstrate PlanD’s recent experiment on developing a “Common Spatial Data Infrastructure – Built Environment Application Platform” to enable a smart governance by fostering co-operation, collaboration and co-creation with different Government departments through application sharing. This platform has the potential for shared use by the businesses, academics and different sectors of the community.

Mr. Raymond LEE, JP

Director of Planning

(20)

Keynote Speaker

About the Speaker

Professor Xiao-yan Li received his Ph.D. degree from the University of Arizona, USA, and his Ph.D. thesis won the Outstanding Doctoral Thesis Award from AEESP in 1997. He is currently the Director of Environmental Engineering Research Centre at the University of Hong Kong. He received Outstanding Young Overseas Researcher Award from the NSFC of China in 2008, First-Class Scientific Research Outstanding Achievement Award (Science & Technology) from the Ministry of Education of China in 2012 and Second-Class State Natural Science Award of China in 2014. He has been an ISI top 1% highly cited author in the environmental field since 2009 and received an award of Top Cited Author 2007-2011 from Water Research. He has published more than 180 SCI journal papers with over 6500 citations and an H-index of 42. Prof. Li is an expert in solid-liquid separation and membrane filtration in water and wastewater treatment and resource recovery from wastewater and sludge. He also has developed models for particle coagulation and flocculation in water, membrane fouling in membrane filtration and membrane bioreactors and aerobic granulation in biological wastewater treatment.

Enhanced Separation and Sludge Refinery for Wastewater

Treatment – Solving the Nexus of Pollution Control and Resource

Recovery in Mega Cities

Abstract

Many forms of development threaten the environment, causing serious water pollution. A city like Hong Kong discharges more than 2 million m3 municipal wastewater every day. Removal of pollutants in wastewater treatment is not only difficult and costly but also produces

a large amount of sludge (~1 ton dewatered sludge/1000 m3 wastewater). Disposal of the sludge, and the food waste as well, is one of the most challenging and expensive environmental problems for large cities. On the other hand, major pollutants (organics and nutrients) in wastewater are valuable resources that should be recovered instead of being degraded or wasted with the sludge. In this project, novel technologies, namely Enhanced Separation and Sludge Refinery (ESSR), are being developed for advanced wastewater treatment and food waste processing. The theme-based project includes the following research and development: (i) Chemically-enhanced membrane filtration with ceramic membranes replacing conventional sedimentation to concentrate pollutants into the sludge and reduce the loading on wastewater treatment, (ii) Side-stream acidogenic sludge and food wastes co-fermentation for P recovery from the sludge and producing volatile fatty acids (VFAs) as the substrates for the production of polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) and as the carbon source for denitrification in wastewater treatment, and (iii) Treatment of the excessive sludge by thermal hydrolysis followed by fungal fermentation to minimize the waste sludge and convert waste organics into valuable organic products and fungal hyphae fibers, with the subsequent recovery of the organic products and ammonia from the solution.

The technological development will greatly advance the practice of municipal wastewater treatment. The new treatment system will not only solve the sludge and food waste problems in large cities but also enable effective resource recovery for value-added products, including fertilizers, bioplastics, ethanol, hyphae-sheets and carbon fiber films. It is estimated that (1) the organic and P loads on the downstream biological treatment will be reduced by up to 50% and 70%, respectively, allowing at least 30% reduction in volume and operating cost, (2) VFAs from the side-stream sludge and food waste co-fermentation will be recovered for PHA biosynthesis, (3) more than 50% organics in the waste sludge will be hydrolyzed and utilized by fungal fermentation to produce valuable organic products and hyphae-sheets, (4) about 50% P and 30% N in wastewater can be recovered as fertilizers. Overall, the novel ESSR process will help resolve the difficult sludge and food waste problems in mega cities. Besides the design of new treatment plants, the novel processes can also be used as add-on modules to retrofit existing treatment facilities, achieving more effective water pollution control, resource recovery and sludge minimization for a sustainable urban environment.

Prof. Xiao-yan LI

Professor

Department of Civil Engineering,

The University of Hong Kong

(21)

Keynote Speaker

About the Speaker

Prof Mercedes Maroto-Valer (FRSE, FIChemE, FRSC, FRSA) is Assistant Deputy Principal (Research & Innovation) and Director of the Research Centre for Carbon Solutions (RCCS) at Heriot-Wat University. She has held academic appointments at the University of Kentucky (1997-1998), Pennsylvania State University (1998-2004), University of Nottingham (2005-2012) and Heriot-Watt University (2012-now). She joined Heriot-Watt University in 2012 as the first Robert Buchan Chair in Sustainable Engineering and she has been Director of the cross-university Energy Academy and Head of the Institute of Mechanical, Process and Energy Engineering.

She is Director of the Research Centre for Carbon Solutions (RCCS) comprising over 50 researchers and an active research portfolio of >£17m. RCCS is a world leading engineering centre delivering innovation for the wider deployment of low-carbon energy systems required for meeting carbon targets, including carbon capture, conversion, transport and storage; emissions control, low carbon fuels and process/systems integration. She has over 450 publications, including editor of 4 books and 32% of her publications are in top 10% most cited worldwide. She holds leading positions in professional societies and editorial boards and currently serves as President Environment, Sustainability and Energy Division – Royal Society Chemistry (RSC), Editor-in-Chief Greenhouse Gases: Science and Technology, Member of the British Geological Survey (BGS) Advisory Committee, Board Member of the Energy Technologies Partnership (ETP), Royal Academy of Engineering (RAEng) Frontiers of Engineering Steering Group, Member Communities Board-Royal Society Chemistry (RSC), and Institute Chemical Engineers (IChemE) Energy Centre – The Leadership Forum. She has received numerous international prizes and awards, including 2018 SRUK/CERU Merit Award (Society of Spanish Researchers in the UK), 2013 Hong-Kong University Mong Distinguished Fellowship, 2011 RSC Environment, Sustainability and Energy Division Early Career Award, 2009 Philip Leverhulme Prize, 2005 US Department of Energy Award for Innovative Development, 1997 Ritchie Prize, 1996 Glenn Award- Fuel Chemistry Division of the American Chemical Society and the 1993 ICI Chemical & Polymers Group Andersonian Centenary Prize. Her research portfolio has included as PI/CI projects worth ~ £35m, and has recently been awarded a prestigious European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Award.

In her role as Assistant Deputy Principal (Research and Innovation), her key strategic responsibilities include leading the development of university wide initiatives (UK, Dubai and Malaysia) to support global research activities.

Low-carbon systems for smart cities

Abstract

Three-quarters of the world's population will live in cities by 2050. This is particularly important in the context of energy demands and rapidly growing urbanisation with cities already representing three quarters of energy consumption and 80% of CO2 emissions worldwide. Cities are already encouraging commercial and residential renewable energy generation, like solar and wind energy. Moreover, energy systems integration can bring additional technology benefits (compensating for intermittent renewables) and resource optimisation. For example, the largest reduction in greenhouse gases can be achieved by Power-to-X systems, i.e. coupling highly concentrated CO2 sources with carbon-free H2 from renewable power for supplying large chemicals and fuels production. In this talk, I will present some of our on-going low-carbon research programmes at the Research Centre for Carbon Solutions (RCCS) at Heriot-Watt University, including optimisation of technologies and their integration into low-carbon systems. Finally, realising the opportunities for decarbonisation requires timely strategic international partnerships, and therefore, opportunities for collaboration will also be discussed.

Prof. M. Mercedes MAROTO-VALER

Buchan Chair in Sustainable Energy Engineering

Assistant Deputy Principal (Research & Innovation)

Director of the Research Centre for Carbon Solutions (RCCS)

Heriot-Watt University

(22)

Keynote Speaker

About the Speaker

Chrisna du Plessis is Associate Professor and Head of the Department of Architecture, and Chair of the School for the Built Environment, University of Pretoria, South Africa. Before joining the University of Pretoria in 2011, she was Principal Researcher at CSIR Built Environment. Prof du Plessis holds graduate and post-graduate degrees in architecture and sustainable development from the University of Pretoria, a PhD in urban sustainability from the University of Salford, from whom she also received an Alumni Achievers Award, and an honorary doctorate from Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden. Prof du Plessis is Leader of the Priority Theme: Sustainable Construction Chair, as well as Chair of the Programme Committee of the Board of the International Council for Research and Innovation in Building and Construction (CIB). She is also member of the International Standards Organisation working group on resilience of buildings and civil engineering works, and serves on the Editorial Boards of the journals Smart and Sustainable Built Environment and Sustainable Earth. She has further served as juror for the LafargeHolcim Foundation Sustainable Building Competition (MEA region, June 2011 & 2017) and European Solar Decathlon (2011 and 2014). Her research concentrates on developing the principles and guiding frameworks for the practices of smart and sustainable construction and human settlement development, with a focus on resilience and regeneration, and she has applied this in a body of work that spanned the fields of housing, construction industry performance, urban/ human settlement development and infrastructure design. She has recently published Designing for Hope: Pathways to regenerative sustainability which was awarded the AfriSam SAIA Award for Innovation in Sustainability in 2016.

Smart Cities– the Promises and the Pitfalls

Abstract

While there are numerous definitions and interpretations of smart cities, most of these can be encapsulated in the definition of Townsend (2013:15): “Smart cities are places where information technology is combined with infrastructure, architecture, everyday objects, and even our bodies to address social, economic and environmental problems.” This definition goes beyond describing what smarts cities are, but also what their purpose should be – addressing real-world problems and not just enabling unbridled hedonistic consumerism. Smart cities therefore have a crucial role to play in meeting sustainable development goals and improving resilience. Sensors and cameras in monitoring networks alert us to dangers; smart grids and the Internet of Things allow us to optimize energy use and streamline logistics; social media communities allow more participative forms of governance and greater democracy. These are all good things, and why the Smart Cities concept holds so much promise for cities in developing countries. Less is said of the negative aspects of smart cities, with critiques focusing on the potential for social polarization, the educational and financial demands made on citizens in order to participate in urban life, technocratic and autocratic governance, excessive surveillance, and an engineering approach focused on quantitative data analysis in pursuit of system optimization (Söderström et al 2014). This paper explores considers the possible implications of global systems disruptions such as climate change and a rise in fascism and social division, and how Smart Cities interventions can build resilience to these disruptors or make cities even more vulnerable. The conclusion is that Smart Cities is a double-edged sword, and we would be wise to think carefully about how we wield it.

Prof Chrisna Du Plessis

Head of Department of Architecture

University of Pretoria, South Africa

(23)

Master Programme Schedule

Da

y 1 -

17 J

une 2019 Monda

y

Room ZS701 JCA Z206 Z504 Z507 Z510 Z513 Z511 Capacity 15-20 70 78 48 40 30 30 8:30 CIB Of ficers Committee Meeting (8:30 – 9:45) W119* W101* W102 W111 W110 TG95 9:00 9:30 10:00 CIB Boar d Meeting (10:00 – 12:00) W080 W096 W104 W070 W107 W117 10:30 11:00 11:30 W086 W098 TG59 W115 W112 12:00 12:30 W065* 13:00 W120 W099 W116 W113 W040 13:30 14:00 14:30 15:00 15:30 CIB Coor dinators Assembly (15:30 – 17:00) 16:00 16:30 17:00 Registration (17:00 – 19:00) Cocktail (18:00 – 19:00) 17:30 18:00 18:30 19:00 CIB Meeting

Regular Commission Meetings: 1.5 hours Meetings W080 + W086: 2.5 hours together Meeting W065: 2 hours All meetings ending at 14:30 may run 15 - 20 minutes late * W119 Meeting is joint with TG93 * W101 Meeting is joint with TG87 * W065 Meeting is joint with TG81, TG83, TG 96, W055, W089, W092 and W121

(24)

Master Programme Schedule

Da

y 2 -

18 J

une 2019

Tuesda

y

Rooms JCA Z209 Z207 Z206 Z211 Z414 (Theatr e) Z407 – 408 Z409 z410 Z412 Z413 Z504 Z505 Z507 Z508 Z208 Z212 Z210 Capacity 490 248 70 228 79 96 (48/room) 60 40 30 30 78 40 48 48 42 54 42 8:00 Registration 8:30 NO other pr ogrammes 9:00

Opening & Keynote

(9:00 – 10:45am) 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 Tea Br eak Poster Session 11:30 Subtheme 3 Subtheme 1 Subtheme 3 Subtheme 6 Subtheme 7 Subtheme 4 W096 TG90 W080 12:00 12:30 13:00 Lunch (13:00 - 14:30) 13:30 14:00 14:30 Subtheme 3 Subtheme 1 Subtheme 2 Subtheme 6 W104 Subtheme 4 W096 Student Chapter Student Chapter Student Chapter W065 W110 W080 W119 15:00 15:30 16:00 Tea Br eak 16:30 Subtheme 3 Subtheme 1 Subtheme 2 Subtheme 6 Subtheme 8 Subtheme 5 W096 Student Chapter Student Chapter Student Chapter W065 TG88 W080 W119 17:00 17:30 18:00 Transportation 18:30 19:00 W elcoming Dinner (19:00 – 22:00), 7/F , L

’Hotel Nina et Convention Centr

e

8 Y

eung Uk Road, T

suen W

an, Hong Kong

19:30 20:00 20:30 21:00 21:30 22:00 Keynote Workshop Scientific Session Sub-theme Paper Pr

esentation

(25)

Master Programme Schedule

Da

y 3 -

19 J

une 2019

W

ednesda

y

Room Z209 Z207 Z206 Z211 Z414 (Theatr e) Z406 Z407 – 408 Z409 Z504 Z505 Z506 Z507 Z508 Z510 Z208 Z212 Z210 Capacity 490 248 70 228 79 60 96 (48/room) 60 78 40 40 48 48 40 42 54 42 9:00 Poster Session 9:30 Keynote 3 NO other pr ogrammes 10:00 Keynote 4 10:30 Tea Br eak 11:00 Subtheme 3 Subtheme 1 Subtheme 5 Subtheme 6 W104 Subtheme 7 Subtheme 4 Subtheme 8 W099 W098 W070 W080 W107 11:30 12:00 12:30 Lunch (12:30 – 14:00) 13:00 13:30 14:00 Keynote 5 NO other pr ogrammes 14:30 Subtheme 3 Subtheme 5 Subtheme 3 Subtheme 6 W104 Subtheme 7 Subtheme 4 W099 W098 Opening Workshop W086 W107 15:00 15:30 16:00 Tea Br eak 16:30 CIB General Assembly (16:10 - 18:10)

17:00 17:30 18:00 18:30 Keynote Workshop Scientific Session Sub-theme Paper Pr

esentation

(26)

Master Programme Schedule

Da

y 4 -

20 J

une 2019

Th

ursda

y

Room JCA Z209 Z207 Z206 Z211 Z414 (Theatr e) Z406 Z407 – 408 Z409 Z504 Z505 Z506 Z507 Z508 Z510 Z208 Z212 Z210 Capacity 490 248 70 228 79 60 96 (48/room) 60 78 40 40 48 48 40 42 54 42 9:00 Poster Session 9:30 Keynote 6 No other pr ogrammes 10:00 Keynote 7 10:30 Tea Br eak 11:00 Subtheme 3 Subtheme 1 Subtheme 8 Subtheme 7 Subtheme 4 W113 W122 TG90 W117 W116 W040 11:30 12:00 12:30 Lunch 13:00 13:30 14:00 Keynote 8 No other pr ogrammes 14:30 Subtheme 3 Subtheme 1 Subtheme 8 Subtheme 6 Subtheme 5 W104 Subtheme 7 TG79 W122 W119 TG91 W117 W078 W062 15:00 15:30 16:00 No other pr ogrammes 16:30

Closing Ceremony (16:30-17:00)

Keynote Workshop Scientific Session Sub-theme Paper Pr

esentation

(27)

Master Programme Schedule

Only Presenter/Corresponding Author/First Author's names are shown here. Pls. refer to full papers for the names of all authors and co-authors. On-site adjustment requests are not included.

Paper information pertains to the cut-off date of this booklet production. Pls. refer to the following website for updates after the Congress: https://www.irb.fraunhofer.de/CIBlibrary/search-advanced.jsp or https://www.cibworld.nl/site/databases/publications.html

Subtheme 1

18 June – Day 2

11:30 Investigating the indoor environmental quality of

a-state-of-the-art tennis dome at a University campus in UK

Emmanuel Essah

11:45 Intelligent Management and Application of Public Buildings

Energy Monitoring Data

Jianjie Zhi, Qiang Xu, Weiqin Wu

12:00 A conceptual model for enhancing efficiency, effectiveness

and value for money in public private partnerships (PPPs) – the case of South Africa

Sadhana Singh

12:15 Finite Element Analysis Based Bridge Damage Modelling for

System Identification

Fangzheng Lin

12:30 Mediation Effects of Incentive Partnerships on Smart

Procurement Factors Influencing Quality Provisions of Affordable Housing Projects within Construction Sector of Nigerian Economy

Nuru Gambo

12:45 Research on the Strategies of Korean Construction

Companies in advancing into the Global Smart City Market

Kim Dong Wook, Jang Hyoun Seung

14:30 The Categorization of Virtual Design and Construction

Services

Jeff Kim

14:45 An Integrated Framework for Design and Management of

Building Integrated Photovoltaic (BIPV) Projects

Pabasara Wijeratne Mudiyanselage

15:00 Renewable energy uptake in the building industry: A

sociotechnical network approach

Rebecca Yang

15:15 State-of-the-Art Review of Defect Detection in Concrete

Bridge Deck

Sherif Abdelkhalek

15:30 Climate-smart housing: A thermal comfort approach Nipuni Wimalasena

15:45 Pre-Casting, Recycle and Performance Efficiency for

Sustainable Construction Components

Fabio Fatiguso

16:30 Estimating quasi-real-time building energy demand using

occupancy information: A case study in Sumida, Tokyo

Takahiro Yoshida

16:45 An Ontology to Sustainability Provision System of Energy

Demands and Indoor Thermal Comfort by Integrating Building Energy Models with IoT – Focusing on Residential Building in Kyojima, Tokyo

Soowon Chang

17:00 Are Vernacular Building Types Smart? Marcellinus Uwadiegwu Okafor

17:15 The Kasumigaseki Building’s Planning and Technology:

Japan’s First Skyscraper from the Viewpoint of Renewal

Ryohei Kumagai

17:30 Field Measurement on Thermal Load of Concrete Building

Model With Wooden Decoration

Atsumasa Yoshida

17:45 Examining Structural Steel Foundation and Thermal Break

Construction Methodologies in a new Museum by Tadao Ando

(28)

Master Programme Schedule

Only Presenter/Corresponding Author/First Author's names are shown here. Pls. refer to full papers for the names of all authors and co-authors. On-site adjustment requests are not included.

Paper information pertains to the cut-off date of this booklet production. Pls. refer to the following website for updates after the Congress: https://www.irb.fraunhofer.de/CIBlibrary/search-advanced.jsp or https://www.cibworld.nl/site/databases/publications.html

Subtheme 2

18 June – Day 2

16:45 A Network Optimization Model for Prepositioning Emergency

Centers in Resilient Cities

Mohammad Ilbeigi

17:00 Smart pavement procurement strategy in planning design

and construction of sustainable transportation and innovation technology

Mohamed Mostafa

17:15 Smart waste logistic system: The Foshan, Mainland China

experience

Kai-Chi Thomas Ying

17:30 The prospects of delivering the electric vehicle charging

infrastructure to support Scotland’s 2032 transport electrification targets

Thomson Craig

17:45 Harnessing Machine-Learning towards Autonomous

Mobility Prediction of Urban Highway Project

Inwoo Jung 14:30 Investigation on the use of Blockchain-Based Smart

Contract within the Construction Supply Chain

Mohammad Ilbeigi

14:45 Classification and Object Reconstruction in Point Clouds

Using Semantic Segmentation and Transfer Learning

Gustaf Uggla

15:00 Planning Considerations for Smart and Sustainable

Transportation Infrastructure: Case Study of Non-Motorised Transport Facilities in Johannesburg South Africa

Chioma Okoro, Innocent Musonda

15:15 An exploratory factor analysis of transportation project

sustainability indicators: A case of projects in South Africa

Chioma Okoro, Innocent Musonda

15:30 Tradition and innovation in design process of new cycle

tracks. A case study in Milan.

Fabio Giucastro

16:30 The Potential for Blockchain and Artificial Intelligence to

Enhance the Transport Sector

Karlson Charlie Hargroves

Subtheme 3

18 June – Day 2

11:30 Smart Cities & Delivery Chain Performance Criteria Martin Skitmore

12:00 Urban planning against poverty: when inclusion

means smart city

Jean-Claude Bolay

12:15 Indoor environmental quality (IEQ) acceptance of

very small flat units of Hong Kong residents

Tsz Wun Tsang

12:30 Fundamental Study on Development of Two-Dimensional

Real-Time Flow Simulation Method of Fresh Concrete in Wall Form Naoki Mishima

13:00 The Integrated Use of BIM-RFID-WSN in

AEC Industry

Alperen Mert Sonmez

11:30 Decision Making: Improving Value Delivery in Early Stage

Design

Kagioglou Michail

11:45 Project and Innovation Management: A Contemporary Case

of Diffusion of Innovation in Business Management

Mohammed Dulaimi

12:00 An Agile Management Approach of Bim: A Case Study Beatriz Zeglin

12:15 Prototyping for Real-time Heavy Lift Simulation using Game

Engine System

Lei Zhen, Francis Siu

12:30 Smart Monitoring Platform of Construction Engineering –

Data-based Research on Total Quality Control of Building and A Smart Monitoring Platform

Yi Chung

12:45 BIM: An Overview of Its Adoption in Brazilian Civil

Construction Industry

(29)

Master Programme Schedule

Only Presenter/Corresponding Author/First Author's names are shown here. Pls. refer to full papers for the names of all authors and co-authors. On-site adjustment requests are not included.

Paper information pertains to the cut-off date of this booklet production. Pls. refer to the following website for updates after the Congress: https://www.irb.fraunhofer.de/CIBlibrary/search-advanced.jsp or https://www.cibworld.nl/site/databases/publications.html

14:30 Statistical Process Control to Quantifying Resilience of

Transportation Infrastructures Using GPS Data: Hurricane Sandy Case Study

Marko

14:45 The application of BIM technology in the super large CBD

project

Juan Ju

15:00 Constraint-free Crane Path Re-planning Hung-Lin Chi, Xiao Li

15:15 Applying Mass Customization to Constructing Interior

Residential Spaces

Stevens Matt

15:30 Embodied Carbon Mitigation Strategies in the Construction

Industry

Navodana Rodrigo, Xiaohua Jin, Srinath Perera 15:45 Manage the Costs of Prefabricated Concrete Buildings:

Project Stakeholders’ Perspective

Wei Wu

16:00 A Smart City Concept for Improving Alteration and

Refurbishment of Buildings

David Oloke

16:15 Implementing Progressive Design Build, A Case Study: UW

West Campus Utility Plant

Giovanni Migliaccio

16:30 Control Choices in the Design Phase of Construction

Projects: A Holistic Perspective

Yadi Li

16:45 Innovative approaches to automated construction: Recent

advances and future visions on three-dimensional printing

Fahriye Hilal Halicioglu

17:00 The potential impact of robotics on construction jobs Josephine Llale

17:15 Participation in Design for Safety: A Literature Review Shu Hui Michelle Lim

17:30 Assessment of 3DP adoption in Colombian Built

Environment Sector

Felipe Rivera

Subtheme 4

18 June – Day 2

11:30 Understanding unstructured 3D point clouds for creating

digital twin city: An unsupervised hierarchical clustering approach

Fan Xue

11:45 The Application of Particle Swarm Optimization in Sewer

Budget

Tarek Zayed

12:00 Designing the Modern Workplace to Inspire the Current

Workforce: A Literature Review

Sarel Lavy, Rachel Henry

12:15 How smart work environment applications can add strategic

value

Rianne Appel-Meulenbroek

12:30 Reshaping approaches to manage construction projects for

the needs of smart built environments

Carmel Lindkvist

12:45 4D BIM Models for smart utility relocation management in

urban infrastructure projects

Vilventhan Aneetha

13:00 Importance level of post graduate student housing facility

services: perceptions of students

Fredrick Simpeh

14:30 Impact of facility management arrangement on occupant

satisfaction: Case studies of six multi-generational condominiums

Chaiwat Riratanaphong

14:45 The role of Building Information Modelling in managing

healthcare requirements

Joao Soliman Junior

15:00 Urban value ecosystem model from facility management

perspective

Alenka Temeljotov Salaj

15:15 Development of a composite performance index for

healthcare facilities management

Cao Lingyan

15:30 An exploration of the owner's requirements for BIM in

facilities management

Nashwan Dawood

15:45 BIM-enabled Safety Management for Facility Repair and

Maintenance: A Review

Nethmin Pilanawithana

16:00 Overview of the uniqueness and value of facility

management

(30)

Master Programme Schedule

Only Presenter/Corresponding Author/First Author's names are shown here. Pls. refer to full papers for the names of all authors and co-authors. On-site adjustment requests are not included.

Paper information pertains to the cut-off date of this booklet production. Pls. refer to the following website for updates after the Congress: https://www.irb.fraunhofer.de/CIBlibrary/search-advanced.jsp or https://www.cibworld.nl/site/databases/publications.html

Subtheme 5

18 June – Day 2

16:30 Stakeholders Embrace Green Construction as the Right

Direction: But As Individuals They Make Self-Interested Decisions

Samuel Hammond

16:45 Effective usage of solar power generation and storage

battery combined system

Takeshi Sase

17:00 Recycling Services Using the Best Value Approach (BVA) Mohammed Algahtany

17:15 Improving the Accuracy of Multi-zone Indoor Temperature

CFD Simulation Under Limited Information Using Solar Analysis and BIM

Helen Kwok

17:30 Efficient Mechanical Commissioning of New Buildings Scott Kramer

17:45 Building sustainable futures: industry perceptions of the

key construction project management graduate competencies required to meet industry needs.

Heather Mitchel Tree, Rebecca Cameron

Subtheme 6

18 June – Day 2

11:30 Governance For Resilient Smart Cities Verna Nel

11:45 Preparing Construction Supply Chains for Blockchain:

An Exploratory Analysis

Ibrahim Yitmen

12:00 An Improved Zero-Price Probability Model to Evaluate the

Default Risk of Listed Construction Companies: Empirical Study in China

Jiabao Jing

12:15 Development of a Framework to Support the Effective

Adoption of BIM in the Public Sector: Lessons for Ireland

Kuang Shiyao

12:30 The role played by the Italian Public Administration in

attracting investment for the enhancement of Real Estate Assets.

Morena Marzia

12:45 A conceptual framework for exploring the impact of social

capital on innovation ambidexterity of Construction Project-Based Small and Medium Size Enterprises (PB-SMEs)

Khaled Anowar Sagar

14:30 Drivers of Private Sectors’ Participation in PPP in China:

From the Perspective of Contract Characteristics

Bo Zhang

14:45 A framework for evaluating potential competitiveness for

construction companies entering international markets

Lean-Sze Nancy Lim

15:00 Governance in Urban Planning: Assessment of the Social

Learning in Information and Communication Technologies, applied to the Sao Paulo Urban Policies review process, from 2014 to 2016

Karin Marins

15:15 Smart Strategies for International HSR Rolling Stock

Suppliers Improving Competitive Advantage

Na Zhang

15:30 Innovation in Construction Contractor Organisations:

Adopting the Concept of Exploration-Exploitation

Nipuni Sumanarathna

15:45 Success Factors (SFs) for Sustainable Affordable Housing:

A Review Study

Michael Adabre

16:30 Dynamic Assessment of Corruption Forms Throughout

Infrastructure Procurement Process: An International Expert Survey

Emmanuel Owusu, Albert Chan, Francis Siu

16:45 Prevention of dust exposure in demolition work in Denmark–

a participatory approach intervention.

Sisse Groen

17:00 Quantifying Enablers' Effects for Smart City Policy

Development

Clement Marc Francois Boris Nicolas

17:15 Housing & People with disabilities Italian Public Policy and

Pathways to Social Inclusion

Cia Genny

17:30 The Social Manager as a Key Player in the Social Housing

Communities

Cia Genny

17:45 Towards an Integrated KPI Framework for Smart Cities Aikaterini Prevelianaki

References

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The research results demonstrate that accreditation has a significant effect on Simons’ (1995) control levers, and belief, diagnostic, boundary and interactive control systems

T C Che, H F Duan, B Pan, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong SAR, PR China; P J Lee, The University of Canterbury, New Zealand; M S Ghidaoui, The Hong Kong University

Malaysia, U.K., Australia Canada, China, Hong Kong, South Africa, South Korea,