Toward Standardised Construction Pipeline Data: Conceptual Minimum Dataset Framework
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Date
2025-08-07
Open Access Location
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Publisher
MDPI (Basel, Switzerland)
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(c) 2025 The Author/s
CC BY 4.0
CC BY 4.0
Abstract
The construction industry is a cornerstone of New Zealand (NZ)’s economic growth, yet strategic infrastructure planning is constrained by fragmented and inconsistent pipeline data. Despite the increasing availability of construction pipeline datasets in NZ, their limited clarity, interoperability, and standardisation impede effective forecasting, policy development, and investment alignment. These challenges are compounded by disparate data structures, inconsistent reporting formats, and semantic discrepancies across sources, undermining cross-agency coordination and long-term infrastructure governance. To address this issue, the study begins by assessing the quality of four prominent pipeline datasets using Wang and Strong’s multidimensional data quality framework. This evaluation provides a necessary foundation for identifying the structural and semantic barriers that limit data integration and informed decision-making. The analysis examines four dimensions of data quality: accessibility, intrinsic quality, contextual relevance, and representational clarity. The findings reveal considerable inconsistencies in data fields, classification systems, and levels of detail across the datasets. Building on these insights, this study also develops a conceptual minimum dataset (MDS) framework comprising three core thematic categories: project identification, project characteristics, and project budget and timing. The proposed conceptual MDS includes unified data definitions, standardised reporting formats, and semantic alignment to enhance cross-platform usability and data confidence. This framework applies to the New Zealand context and is designed for replication in other jurisdictions, supporting the global push toward open, high-quality infrastructure data. The study contributes to the construction informatics and infrastructure planning by offering a practical solution to a critical data governance issue and introducing a transferable methodology for developing minimum data standards in the built environment to enable more informed, coordinated, and evidence-based decision-making.
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Citation
Elkhidir E, Rotimi JOB, Patel T, Moshood TD, Wilkinson S. (2025). Toward standardised construction pipeline data: Conceptual minimum dataset framework.. Buildings. 15. (pp. 1-26).