Journey from Prefabrication and DfMA to Informed Design
How data‑driven design is reshaping quality, certainty, and delivery speed in construction
A Shift Toward Smarter Delivery
For years, prefabrication and DfMA have promised faster, safer, and more predictable construction. And while these methods have delivered real gains, the industry is now moving toward something even more powerful — a design process that doesn’t just support manufacturing but is informed by it from the very beginning.
This is where Informed Design enters the picture: a data‑driven approach that embeds manufacturing intelligence directly into the design process, creating a seamless connection between digital intent and physical delivery.
Prefabrication & DfMA: Simple Definitions and Key Benefits:
Prefabrication
The process of manufacturing building components off‑site in a controlled environment, then transporting them for assembly on‑site.
Key benefits:
- Faster installation
- Improved safety
- Reduced waste
- Higher quality control
DfMA (Design for Manufacture and Assembly)
A design methodology that optimises components for efficient manufacturing and straightforward on‑site assembly.
Key benefits:
- Fewer design errors
- Reduced complexity
- Lower production costs
- More predictable outcomes
Together, prefabrication and DfMA have helped the industry move away from bespoke, on‑site construction toward more repeatable, reliable, and scalable delivery.
How We Work Today — and Why It’s Changing:
The Current State
Most prefabrication and DfMA workflows still rely on design teams interpreting manufacturing requirements rather than having those requirements embedded directly into the model. This creates gaps:
- Late design changes
- Misalignment between design and fabrication
- Rework due to incompatible details
- Limited visibility into manufacturing constraints
The next evolution is eliminating these gaps entirely.
Transitioning to Informed Design:
- What Is Informed Design?
Informed Design is a workflow where design decisions are guided by real manufacturing data from the start. Instead of designing first and checking manufacturability later, the model itself carries the intelligence needed to ensure every element can be produced, transported, and assembled efficiently.
It’s not just “designing for manufacture” — it’s designing with manufacturing intelligence built in.
- What Powers Informed Design?
Informed Design relies on a connected digital ecosystem, including:
- BIM and structured data
- Coordinated, clash‑free models
- Manufacturer‑ready component libraries
- Rules‑based design automation
- Digital twins and feedback loops from the field
When these elements work together, the model becomes a single source of truth that reflects not just geometry, but how things are actually made.
- Its Role in Digital Engineering
For Digital Engineering teams, Informed Design is a game‑changer. It:
- Reduces manual checking
- Automates compliance with manufacturing rules
- Improves coordination between designers, fabricators, and installers
- Enables earlier cost and programme certainty
- Supports industrialised construction and repeatable delivery
It shifts the role of Digital Engineering from “model managers” to data stewards and workflow enablers.
- Benefits of Informed Design
When manufacturing intelligence is embedded into the design process, the entire project benefits:
- Higher quality through standardised, validated components
- Greater certainty with fewer late changes and clashes
- Faster delivery thanks to predictable fabrication and assembly
- Reduced waste from optimised material use
- Improved safety with more off‑site construction
- Better collaboration across the supply chain
It’s the bridge between digital intent and physical reality — and it’s becoming essential for modern delivery.
Key Takeaways & Final Thoughts
- Prefabrication and DfMA laid the foundation for more efficient construction.
- But the next leap forward is Informed Design, where manufacturing intelligence is embedded directly into the design process.
- This shift is powered by BIM, coordinated models, structured data, and digital engineering expertise.
- The result is a more predictable, higher‑quality, and faster delivery model that benefits every stakeholder — from designers to fabricators to clients.
As the industry continues to industrialise, Informed Design isn’t just an innovation — it’s the new baseline for delivering smarter, safer, and more sustainable projects.