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EVENT OVERVIEW

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Late-stage Malaysia is moving quickly from pilot projects to scale in prefabricated and Industrialised Building Systems (IBS). Recent market intelligence estimates put Malaysia’s prefabricated construction market at roughly MYR 3.8–6.6 billion in 2024 – 2025 and forecasts pointing toward MYR ≈9.3 billion by 2029 as volumetric modules, precast and panelised systems expand across residential, commercial and institutional work. The technology is already in everyday use locally. Large IBS/ precast and modular elements were used for Seri Mutiara apartments, Suasana Sentral Loft, KLIA2 terminal components, Putrajaya office blocks and Bukit Jalil Park amenities, with developer / contractor case studies showing construction time savings of 20–40% when factory production, MEP pods and precast panels are adopted. 

 

Across Southeast Asia the trajectory is similar but larger in scale and more diverse by country. Regional reports estimate the prefabricated steel/PS building sub-market alone growing at nearly 10% CAGR through 2028, while Asia-Pacific modular markets are forecast to expand rapidly, with market projections showing multi-billion-dollar growth through 2030. Adoption hotspots include Indonesia, Vietnam and the Philippines for industrial and affordable housing modules and Singapore, where public housing PPVC and national precast hubs. The HL-Sunway Prefab Hub for example, cites capacity at up to 100,000 m³ of precast output and production for thousands of dwelling units annually. This demonstrates factory scale, high productivity and quality control that cut on-site schedules dramatically; site cycle times can fall to 7–10 days per floor in high-rise projects. Taken together, the evidence shows prefabrication reduces overall project cost and schedule risk, improves quality and safety, lowers waste, and is a practical lever for delivering housing and building stock faster — making it a strategic solution for urbanisation and labour-constrained construction markets in Malaysia and its neighbours.

 

The surge in prefabricated construction in Southeast Asia is unlocking significant commercial upside for early movers, as governments and private developers pivot toward solutions that deliver faster, cheaper and more predictable outcomes. Firms that can provide design-for-manufacture expertise, modular supply capability, digital fabrication, logistics, and on-site assembly services stand to tap into multi-billion-ringgit project pipelines across housing, healthcare, education, hospitality, and industrial assets, where developers routinely cite 20–40% time savings and 20–30% labour cost reductions. The 14th Annual Prefabrication Conference in Kuala Lumpur brings together industry leaders and government stakeholders to address these challenges with practical insights, real project case studies, and clear implementation strategies. Attending the conference enables organisations to remain aligned with national priorities, strengthen competitive positioning, and identify pathways for growth and to ensure that your company stays relevant in forever evolving construction market.

EVENT PARTNERS

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Build Australia is a quarterly magazine dedicated to the Australian construction industry,available in both print and digital formats. It primarily targets builders, architects, and industry organisations, serving as acomprehensive resource for its readers. The magazine oers news and updates with timely information on industry developments, in-depth analysis with detailed exploration of important trends and challenges, andspecialised content with tailored articles to meet the needs of construction professionals. With a multi-channel distribution strategy, Build Australia maintains a strong presence in the Australian market while reaching global decision-makers and stakeholders in the construction and architecture sectors.

 

www.buildaustralia.com.au

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Construction Research Institute of Malaysia (CREAM) is a research institution of the Construction Industry Development Board (CIDB) and a company limited by guarantee dedicated to improving the Malaysian construction industry through research, consultancy, certification, and testing facilities. Established since 2004, CREAM will be the frontier in providing research insight in Construction 4.0, advanced materials, sustainability, forensic and structural engineering, IBS, construction productivity as well as affordable housing.

 

www.cream.my

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Malaysia Proptech Association (MPA) leads the digital transformation of the built environment in Malaysia and beyond, through innovation, collaboration, and sustainable growth. MPA aims to build a strong community with integrity, inclusivity, and equality. 

 

Our driving principles and pillars of our growth are:
Advocacy: Digitalizing the built environment by championing the transformation with authorities, regulators, and policy makers.
Business Opportunities: Connecting our members to funding, partnerships, and market access.
Community: Building a vibrant collaborative ecosystem with innovators and changemakers.
Development: Stimulate adoption of the latest technology available within our ecosystem
Education: Create widespread awareness about proptech within the public, the stakeholders, and collaborating with educational institutions.

proptech.org.my/

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Federation of Malaysian Foundry and Engineering Industries Associations (FOMFEIA) is the national representative body for foundry and engineering related trade and industries in Malaysia. It was established on 7th January 1977 and the membership currently comprises 11 States Associations. Total number of member companies of State Associations has well exceeded 2,000 throughout Malaysia.

 

www.fomfeia.org.my/

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