Episode Description
Prefabrication is no longer a technology conversation. It is an owner conversation.
In this episode of Prefab, Unfiltered, recorded live at Advancing Prefabrication, Todd Weyandt sits down with Emily Mills Marineau to explore how owners evaluate prefab, modular construction, and offsite strategies through the lens of risk-adjusted return.
The biggest misconception in prefabrication is that the value is simply cost savings. In reality, owners prioritize certainty, schedule predictability, and reduced variability across the project lifecycle.
This conversation unpacks what it takes for prefabrication to move from curiosity to confidence and why the first prefab project inside any organization carries disproportionate weight.
If you care about prefabrication, modular construction, owner strategy, risk management, or construction innovation, this episode offers an executive-level perspective on what truly drives adoption.
You’ll Learn
- Why owners prioritize certainty over lowest cost in prefabrication
- How risk-adjusted return shapes modular construction decisions
- Why first prefab projects must be executed with precision
- The hidden impact of labor shortages on offsite construction
- Why documenting lessons learned is critical for scaling prefab
Meet Our Guest
Emily Mills Marineau brings a strategic owner-side perspective to prefabrication and industrialized construction. With a background that includes M&A experience at Apple and leadership roles within construction innovation, she focuses on how procurement models, contracts, and risk frameworks influence prefab adoption.
Her work centers on aligning executive leadership, project teams, and delivery partners around scalable prefabrication strategies that prioritize certainty, quality, and long-term performance.
Todd Takes Owners Do Not Want Cheaper. They Want Certainty.
The true value of prefabrication and modular construction is not lowest cost. It is reduced variability, schedule confidence, and predictable execution. When we frame prefab around savings alone, we undersell its strategic value.
The First Prefab Project Cannot Fail.Initial prefab projects shape long-term perception. If the first effort struggles, adoption stalls. Strong planning, aligned partnerships, and realistic expectations are essential for building internal confidence.
Labor and Documentation Are the Quiet Barriers.Technology is advancing quickly. Workforce shortages and inconsistent knowledge capture are not. If prefabrication is going to scale across healthcare, multifamily, and commercial construction, the industry must improve both labor strategy and institutional learning.
More Resources
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