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A Research on the Approach of Employment Authorization Licence of the Construction Industry Employees

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A Research on the Approach of Employment Authorization Licence of the Construction Industry Employees

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  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 11
  • 10.1080/01446199000000007
Construction industry in Turkey
  • Mar 1, 1990
  • Construction Management and Economics
  • Amir Tavakoli + 1 more

The Republic of Turkey is a major force in the international construction market. This paperpresents the construction industry in Turkey. Special attention is paid to the overview of the industry; the size and structure of the construction industry; construction contracts (competitively bid, negotiated, build-operate-transfer, ‘mutual construction’); selection of contractor and bidding law; management structure; construction management techniques (bar chart, progress and development outline, CPM); trend of the domestic market; and international construction.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 24
  • 10.1016/j.sbspro.2014.03.004
Planning Engineers’ Estimates on Labor Productivity: Theory and Practice
  • Mar 1, 2014
  • Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences
  • Serdar Ulubeyli + 2 more

Planning Engineers’ Estimates on Labor Productivity: Theory and Practice

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  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 6
  • 10.5195/emaj.2017.127
The Impact of Housing Loans on Economic Growth in Turkey: Times Series Analysis for 2010-2015 Period
  • Sep 22, 2017
  • EMAJ: Emerging Markets Journal
  • Gülay Selvi Hanişoğlu + 1 more

Turkish economy has a growing trend after the 2000-2001 economic crises, although ups and downs were experienced in some periods. Some of the important components of Turkish economy are the construction industry and the related housing industry. The construction industry in Turkey has a multiplier effect in the economy since it uses domestic inputs and creates jobs for the labor. Also, the construction sector actors operate overseas and enable inflow of foreign currency to Turkey, thus fostering economic growth. In the recent years, foreign funds and overseas firms have an increasing interest in Turkish construction industry. The Turkish housing industry as one of the leading components of construction industry has also experienced eye-catching developments in the recent years. Definitely, the Turkish housing industry is now much more competitive compared to former years. The global economic crisis of 2008 originated from the housing industry and had devastating effects all over the world. However, the 2008 global economic crisis had relatively lighter effects in Turkey. Parallel to the improvements in construction and housing industries, several financial alternatives exist today. Banks have diversified their credit products considering the needs of consumers. Moreover, the mortgage law going in effect and the mortgage practices becoming popular have contributed to the progress of housing industry. This study analyzed the effect of housing loans and their diversification on economic growth. The research concentrated on the 2010-2015 period, where the impact of 2008 global crisis has diminished.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 23
  • 10.1108/ecam-10-2021-0890
Factors affecting the performance of construction industry during the COVID-19 pandemic: a case study in Turkey
  • Aug 18, 2022
  • Engineering, Construction and Architectural Management
  • Gulden Gumusburun Ayalp + 1 more

PurposeThe construction industry is a crucial industry for national development worldwide. Because the construction industry is tied to national and international economic activities, the COVID-19 outbreak has limited construction projects. Therefore, this study investigates the most influential factors regarding COVID-19 and their effects on the construction industry.Design/methodology/approachThe potential impacts of COVID-19 on the construction industry were identified through a realistic literature review and interviews with professionals. A questionnaire was distributed via e-mail to architects, civil engineers and contractors who play vital roles during the construction processes. The data were analysed using SPSS 22 and LISREL 8.7 software to quantify the most influential pandemic-related factors faced by the construction industry.FindingsTen influential pandemic factors affecting the construction industry in Turkey were identified. Among them, “increased costs and price escalations due to shortage of raw materials and supply chain disruption” and “challenges with payment and cash flows” were determined as the most influential pandemic factors.Research limitations/implicationsThis research aims to advance comprehension of pandemic impacts and contributes an incipient assessment framework based on 10 determined pandemic factors. Therefore, contractors, architects and civil engineers may analyse their weaknesses and organise precise priorities so that their firms may remain competitive, thus minimising the adverse impact of COVID-19 and possible forthcoming waves.Originality/valueFew studies have identified the effect of pandemics on the construction industry qualitatively, forcing management to make projections to the current situation. Moreover, no study has provided insights into the influential factors of pandemics using quantitative methods. Therefore, this study comprehensively and quantitatively determines the relevant COVID-19 pandemic factors using exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and utilises confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and structural equation modelling to present a structural model of how pandemic factors affect the Turkish construction industry.

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  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 27
  • 10.3390/su14159537
Modeling the Critical Success Factors for BIM Implementation in Developing Countries: Sampling the Turkish AEC Industry
  • Aug 3, 2022
  • Sustainability
  • Seda Tan + 4 more

One of the latest advancements transforming the global architectural, engineering, and construction (AEC) industry is building information modeling (BIM). Although BIM implementation is at high level in developed countries, it is at a lower level in developing countries. BIM is new to the construction industry in Turkey, with only minor construction firms having implemented it. When making projections based on the current state of the Turkish AEC industry, it is foreseen that it will become mandatory in the near future. Considering this projection, it is doubtful that many construction companies will be caught unprepared for this situation and will not know how to implement BIM. Therefore, this study aimed to identify and model the critical success factors for BIM implementation and their impact size in order to gain insight for the fast and efficient implementation of BIM among construction firms in the Turkish AEC industry, which can be generalized for most developing countries. To reach these aims, a questionnaire was designed with 41 identified success criteria (SC) that were derived through a systematic literature review (SLR). The survey was conducted on construction professionals who actively implement BIM technology at their occupied firms in Turkey and they were asked to rank the importance of 41 SC on a five-point Likert scale. The sampling frame consisted of architects and civil engineers, and in total, 243 responses were received. The differentiation between SC and critical success criteria (CSC) was obtained by using a normalized mean cutoff value. An exploratory factor analysis (EFA) was used to identify the critical success factors (CSFs), and structural equation modeling (SEM) was used to examine the underlying size effects of each CSF on BIM implementation in the Turkish AEC industry. The results of this study reveal 20 CSC for successful BIM implementation, and EFA exhibited three CSFs from 20 CSC. Three critical success factors for BIM implementation in the Turkish construction industry were determined and grouped into two categories. “Awareness of technological benefits” and “organizational readiness and competitive advantages” formed one group and are the most influential critical success factors for BIM implementation. “Motivation of management regarding BIM” formed the second group of critical success factors that have a significant effect.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 19
  • 10.1080/23760818.2015.1099781
The State, Islamists, Discourses, and Bourgeoisie: The Construction Industry in Turkey
  • Jan 2, 2016
  • Research and Policy on Turkey
  • İsmail Doğa Karatepe

The construction sector became source of controversies in recent years in Turkey. This study is devised to explore the three crucial elements of controversial construction ‘craziness’ that Turkey has experienced since 2002, when the Islamic conservative Justice and Development Party (Adalet ve Kalkinma Partisi, AKP) came to power, sweeping victory in the parliamentary elections with 34.3 per cent of the total votes. The first element is a regarded relation between GDP and the construction industry with its supposedly strong linkages with other industries. The second element is the mounting extensive and direct involvement of the AKP governments in the sector, especially through Housing Development Administration of Turkey. Finally yet importantly, the clientelistic networks between the AKP and some privileged businessmen have to be mentioned. Exploring these elements leads to the conclusion that during the AKP era the political involvement in and the economic development of sector became inextricably enme...

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 52
  • 10.1016/j.enbuild.2004.07.010
Double skin façade's effects on heat losses of office buildings in Istanbul
  • Mar 7, 2005
  • Energy and Buildings
  • Zerrin Yılmaz + 1 more

Double skin façade's effects on heat losses of office buildings in Istanbul

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 8
  • 10.1080/15623599.2023.2239498
Drivers and barriers on implementing XR technologies in the construction industry in Turkey
  • Aug 3, 2023
  • International Journal of Construction Management
  • Tayibe Seyman-Guray + 1 more

This study presents drivers and barriers on construction industry extended reality (XR) implementations in Turkey. It aims to investigate the current state and future directions of XR opportunities for architecture offices and construction companies in a developing country. A quantitative approach was employed which involves conducting a survey, performing statistical analyses, and verification of the hypotheses. The data were analyzed by SPSS and Excel using the frequency, mean score, standard deviation (SD), and one sample t-test. Thirty-three different companies participated in the survey with a return rate of 56.89%. The results were considered statistically significant since all the p-values were below 0.05. The findings revealed that even though 60% of the companies are not using XR, 60% companies have near future plans on implementing them. According to the results, XR was considered as beneficial and highly motivating for the near future, yet it needs to be widespread for companies to keep themselves abreast of information and communication technology trends. Finally, by considering the findings obtained from the results this study reaches a classification of drivers as ‘increased efficiency: time-cost-quality’ and ‘increased communication and coordination’ while barriers as ‘technical limitations’, ‘high costs’, and ‘unqualified professional’.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 17
  • 10.1051/radiopro/2015020
Radiometric analysis of volcanic tuff stones used as ornamental and structural building materials in Turkey and evaluation of radiological risk
  • Oct 1, 2015
  • Radioprotection
  • Ş Turhan + 2 more

Volcanic tuff stones are widely used to coat the interior and exterior surfaces of buildings for ornamental purposes in the construction industry in Turkey, and are also used as structural material in the construction of masonry buildings, especially in the Cappadocia region, which is a popular tourist destination. In this study, seventy-six volcanic tuff stone samples collected from different quarries located in different geographical regions in Turkey were surveyed for radiometric analysis, and the radiological risk to human health caused by ionizing radiation from natural radionuclides in the volcanic tuff stone samples was evaluated. The activity concentrations of 238 U, 232 Th, 226 Ra and 40 K analyzed in volcanic tuff stone samples were very variable, ranging from 3 to 389, 8 to 401, 2 to 263 and 99 to 2107 Bq kg -1 , respectively. The emanation coefficient and mass exhalation rate of 222 Rn measured for the volcanic tuff samples ranged from 2 to 68% with an average of 34%, and 1 to 194 μ Bq kg -1 s -1 with an average of 43 μ Bq kg -1 s -1 , respectively. The external (gamma) and internal (alpha) hazard indices, indoor absorbed gamma dose rate and the corresponding annual effective dose were estimated to evaluate the potential radiological risk to human health. The results showed that all of the surveyed volcanic tuff stone samples can be used as covering building materials for ornamental or insulating covering purposes. However, the use of some volcanic tuff stone samples as structural building materials should be restricted.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.1080/17406315.2017.1405587
Treacherous Productions of Fantasy: Ağaoğlu Housing Commercials
  • May 4, 2017
  • Home Cultures
  • Gülsüm Baydar + 1 more

Ali Ağaoğlu is the leading figure in the construction industry in Turkey, specializing in luxury housing estates. His sales figures have reached record levels since the early 2000s, far surpassing those of other similar entrepreneurs’. While governmental policies that prioritize the development of the construction sector partially account for Ağaoğlu’s commercial success, we contend that the analysis of popular media images is essential in order to understand his estates’ popularity. Based on a close reading of his media appearances in housing commercials and interviews in the light of psychoanalytical theory, we argue that Ağaoğlu has manufactured a realizable fantasy for his clients, which structures their desires in the cultural context of consumer capitalism. However, the limits of Ağaoğlu’s fantasy world of housing were tested in an unexpected outbreak in one of his estates, where the homeowers traversed their fantasies.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 2
  • 10.1177/00420980231168054
Verticalities in comparison: Debates on high-rise construction in Izmir and Istanbul
  • May 19, 2023
  • Urban Studies
  • Anlam Filiz

Large-scale high-rise architecture projects have been central to the rise of the construction industry in Turkey in recent years. This vertical escalation, however, has not been received without dissidence. Scholars, activists, journalists and officials with different viewpoints have participated in media debates regarding the reasons and consequences of this transformation. In these discussions, stakeholders have raised various environmental, cultural and ethical concerns that the vertical organisation of cities generate. Focussing on juxtapositions of Izmir and Istanbul in debates on urban verticality in the city of Izmir, Turkey’s third most populated city, the paper examines how such comparisons with Istanbul, where the recent urban neoliberal transformation is experienced most intensely, have been mobilised to oppose vertical expansion. The paper argues that as a result of the recent centralisation of the Turkish economy around construction, the hyper-visibility of skyscrapers and the concentration of the urban transformation generated by the Turkish construction industry in Istanbul, skyscrapers have become materialised symbols of Istanbul’s integration into global capitalism, neoliberal urbanisation, and the difference between Istanbul and other urban centres in Turkey. This example establishes urban verticality as a discursive axis at which urban centres outside of the Global North establish their difference from each other.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 19
  • 10.18400/tekderg.389757
An Investigation of Litigation Process in Construction Industry in Turkey
  • Nov 1, 2018
  • Teknik Dergi
  • Murat Çevi̇kbaş + 1 more

Projects are laden with variety of uncertainties depending on their unique characteristics. Construction projects have their own distinctive qualifications and technology. Thereby, unspecialized legal professionals on the subjects of construction related cases would lead the judicial process to settle on unhealthy basis. In this study, it is aimed to classify disputes related to construction sector to distinguish the most frequent dispute sources and to identify the competency level and qualification of concerned judicial actors. Correspondingly, 282 cases between 2007 and 2017 in Turkey have been classified to relevant contents and analysed. In conclusion, contract contents, civil projects, contracts between employers and contractors, debits and credits related disputes have been detected as the most frequent dispute sources under the main contents. Secondly, in majority of the cases, reassessment has been given by Court of Cassation due to inadequate competency level of Courts of First Instance and expert witnesses.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 79
  • 10.1108/ecam-08-2017-0186
Exploring the BIM and lean synergies in the Istanbul Grand Airport construction project
  • Aug 9, 2018
  • Engineering, Construction and Architectural Management
  • Ozan Koseoglu + 2 more

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to develop a solid understanding of how integrated building information modeling (BIM) is implemented in a mega project such as the (Istanbul Grand Airport IGA) construction project, which is the main case study in the research methodology.Design/methodology/approachThe paper examines and identifies the lean efficiency gains achieved in the IGA project and highlights the synergies between BIM and lean concepts based on the facts and figures from the case study analysis. In complex projects, there is a vital need for a comprehensive approach that would enable successful managing of design and construction information via accurate modeling, collaboration and integration throughout the project lifecycles covering various disciplines.FindingsThe research findings in the paper make a significant impact in understanding the strategic perception for BIM as a new way of working methodology for the construction industry in Turkey, since the IGA project has become not only a key learning hub for the Turkish construction industry, but also a global landmark for digital construction and project delivery. In addition it proves the mutual synergies between BIM and lean practices.Originality/valueThe IGA project is a mega-scale airport construction project with features beyond building industry challenges, and it should be designed and constructed with tight deadlines and budgets and be operated afterwards in an effective and efficient way. Can lean and BIM help for timely and on-budget completion of the project and could they support the management of the airport facility after handover? The paper also discusses the lean and BIM implementation in the project in relation to the BIM Level 3 requirements.

  • Conference Article
  • 10.1109/picmet.2006.296706
Determining the Expectation of Kocaeli Industry from Vocational and Technical Education System
  • Jul 1, 2006
  • Deniz Kasap + 2 more

Any effective vocational education and training system depends on its congruence with the dynamic forces of the labor market and its respect for the culture it serves. The dynamics of the labor market depends on the needs of industry and commerce and the availability of trained individuals to meet them in their current form and adapt to them in their future form. The province of Kocaeli has become the most rapidly growing industrial regions in Turkey and has always been evaluated as an important region for industrial investments. This paper presents a "Need Assessment" study that determines the technical workforce type and amount endowed with knowledge and experience to keep up with the technological changes for Kocaeli industry in Turkey with qualitative and quantitative methods. This paper also examines the potential professions which are going to be crucial within 15 years. A survey was conducted and focused group meetings were arranged with participation of industry and vocational and technical school representatives. The results of this study will be used at development of vocational and technical education syllabus by Ministry of National Education and will be well-designed tool to develop the cooperation between Ministry of National Education and Kocaeli industry

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 3
  • 10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.802.3
Adverse Effects of Soil Grouting on Sandy Soils
  • Oct 1, 2015
  • Applied Mechanics and Materials
  • Erdal Akyol + 2 more

Uncontrolled growing of construction industry in Turkey has caused a large number of buildings were constructed without the benefit of sufficient engineering supervision. These phenomena have contributed to the increase in the number of seismically weak buildings. After the Great Marmara Earthquake seismic performances of the existing structures have been inspected and some of them fortified. In this context, an existing building foundation, built on a problematic soil and located in Denizli where is in high seismic risk area, has been strengthened by cement injection. Grouting holes up to 7 m in depth from the basement level were used in 45 points. The injection has created a less permeable barrier, acts like an underground dam. This barrier has caused rising of the underground water table around the recharge area of the foundation. The raised underground water has increased hydraulic gradient and hydraulic pressure. Then, the basement floor has arched up to 12 cm and underground water has risen up to 30 cm high after one year of the injection practice. In this study, hydrogeological characteristics of the soil structural analysis have been evaluated and some solutions suggested remedying the problem. It should be kept in mind as injection practice is employed in aquifers.

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