Funding to help boost UK manufacturing won by University of Bath

February 28, 2013
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The University of Bath is set to receive a share of a £12m Government grant aimed at improving the UK’s manufacturing competitiveness.

The money will be used to fund research aimed at introducing the use of the very latest ICT developments, including cloud computing, crowdsourcing, gaming technology, and ICT dashboards and platforms, to provide new ways to develop, design and manage manufacturing.  

At the University of Bath,  will lead a £1.9m project called The Language of Collaborative Manufacturing. Dr Hicks’ research is aimed at producing a new suite of ICT tools and a ‘next-generation project dashboard’ to address major issues in modern engineering projects.

Dr Hicks said: “Modern engineering projects such as aircraft manufacture operate globally, and involve thousands of engineers and companies. Managing such collaborative, large-scale, high-value engineering projects and the communications within them is complex and risky.

“Companies need to minimise delivery setbacks cost overruns, risk and collapsed projects. Overruns on engineering projects cost the US economy $150m a day.”

Dr Hicks and the research team will analyse the relationship between emails and Computer Aided Design (CAD) models, simulations and reports in order to predict the status and performance of a project.

They will identify the successful characteristics of project phases, and create methods to aid the management of intellectual property, and the capture of design records, lessons learned, decisions taken, and rationale to help manufacturing.

As a result the status of engineering projects will be interpreted better, enabling early warning of issues, improved management, increased productivity, and ultimately improve a product’s design and manufacture.

The money Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council is making the awards as part of a £45m package of investments in manufacturing research announced today by David Willetts, minister for Universities and Science.  

Mark Claydon-Smith, Manufacturing the Future lead at the EPSRC, said: “Advanced manufacturing is highly knowledge-intensive and ICT has a huge role to play in improving manufacturing intelligence, supporting collaboration, increasing efficiency, speeding up innovation and enabling new business models and technologies.”

 

 

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