Abstract:
Construction industry is identified as one of the most asset intensive industries. The
dependance on fixed assets such as construction machinery, equipment, plant and vehicles
has made industry vulnerable to failures due to not having standard practices of utilization of
these fixed assets. Being a fast-moving economy in South Asia, Sri Lanka is yet to fully
standardize its Construction Industry and resources utilization. The published literature
suggest that it heavily depends on utilization of better Fixed Assets and Fixed Asset
Maintenance Systems (FAMS). Implementation of FAMS has been a challenging task for
local contractors as failure cases have seen in the recent past frequently. Delays, idling,
accidents, environment damage, low service level and less efficiency of fixed assets could be
identified as major drawbacks, which in return produced finance outflow from the
organizations. This paper elaborates on existing maintenance approaches like corrective,
preventive and predictive while aiming to research the validity of Priority based Fixed Asset
Maintenance approach (PFAM) in local Construction Contractors. Based on previously
conducted relevant researches of more than 5 authors, it was decided to conduct a
questionnaire survey followed by a Delphi consensus to establish priority parameters on a
randomly selected sample of 56 organizations to develop a suitable priority score framework.
Based on the survey responses and expert opinion, Physical Condition (PC), Performance
(PER), and Criticality (C) were identified as three main priority categories under which subpriority
factors were determined. 33 construction equipment were selected from a road
construction company and assigned priority scores to validate the suggested methodology as
a case study. 54.4% of all the contractor organizations have classified their fixed asset
register including construction equipment, office equipment, spare parts or service units,
furniture and fittings, plant and machinery, building and land and building fixed asset
categories which are stated by IAS 16 global standard and LKAS 15 local standard. It could
be concluded that majority of contractors still utilizes 'fail and fix‘ or 'preventive‘
maintenance approaches, where there is technical possibility implement PBFAM practices.
The priority score framework has shown substantial validity while testing with the local road
contractors with real world data.
Citation:
Arachchi, G.R.V. (2022). Applicability of priority based fixed asset maintenance in construction contractors : a case from Sri Lanka [Master's theses, University of Moratuwa]. Institutional Repository University of Moratuwa. http://dl.lib.uom.lk/handle/123/21641