Waste Material Management on Building Construction in Sri Lanka; Mitigation of Concrete Waste Factor and Cost Effect During Construction Stage
Abstract
Material waste is one of the most important factors which affects the contractor directly
by reducing profit and affecting the employer by increasing project costs. As a result,
most of the building projects have planned to address multiple levels to reduce this waste.
Concrete debris is one of the waste materials in construction that costs the project’s stake holders the most. When compared to other material wastes, the volume of waste concrete
generates as a primary component of the construction is disproportionately high in Sri
Lankan construction projects. Most countries are currently working to reduce concrete
waste while pursuing sustainable growth. As a result, traditional methods were used to
reduce concrete waste which have not been effective over time. The aims of this research
study is to achieve waste material management in building construction in Sri Lanka,
mitigation of concrete waste factors, and cost-effective during the construction stage.
To achieve the aims, a comprehensive literature review, semi- structured interviews and
a questionnaire were conducted to gather data through both qualitative and quantitative
procedures. The empirical findings revealed that concrete waste has a positive relationship
with project cost. Precast elements, lean construction techniques, 3R concept, and a few
more others were identified to minimize concrete waste, which reduces the project cost in
the Sri Lankan construction industry. These research findings deliver beneficial evidence
to the practitioners with an in-depth understanding of the important necessity for the
construction industry and thereby benefiting to reduce the project cost in construction
projects.