Prefabrication of building components has been ongoing since the industrial revolution, especially with the adoption of the
balloon frame construction method in the 1830s. Applied to single-family homes, it gave rise to many kit homes, such as the
Sears Modern Homes imagined by the eponymous company in 1908. The rise of steel frames and the first skyscrapers led to the industrial production of steel components, produced off-site. In 1930, the
Empire State building, one of the most famous skyscrapers in New-York City, was built essentially off site, in the record time of one year and 45 days. Thanks to the prefabricated elements, a new floor was built every day, seven every week. After the Second World War,
Walter Gropius and
Konrad Wachsmann drew a new type of prefabricated single-family house, based on a grid of wooden panels and a seamless metal assembly. Today, the most widely used form of
prefabrication in building and
civil engineering is the use of prefabricated
concrete and prefabricated
steel sections in structures where a particular part or form is repeated many times. From the 1990s, industry experts and scholars started using the term off-site construction has been in use since the 1990s to consider technological, engineering and industrialization evolutions in the building sector. Off-site construction is a subject of research since at least 2004. == Public Policy ==