| Module | Material | Dimensions | Density (kg/m³) | Voids | Add-ons (kg) | Qty | Per module (kg) | Total (kg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Panelized Wall Pod | Steel (typical) | 2×1.5×0.25 m | 7,850 | 5.0% | 35.0 | 2 | 5,628.1 | 11,256.3 |
| Precast Stair Flight | Reinforced concrete | 3.2×1.2×0.18 m | 2,500 | 3.0% | 80.0 | 1 | 1,756.2 | 1,756.2 |
| Timber Utility Box | Timber (softwood) | 1.8×1×1.1 m | 500 | 10.0% | 25.0 | 4 | 916.0 | 3,664.0 |
| Facade Cassette | Aluminum | 1.5×1.5×0.12 m | 2,700 | 15.0% | 12.0 | 10 | 631.7 | 6,316.5 |
| Masonry Service Niche | Masonry (brick) | 1.2×0.8×0.6 m | 1,900 | 6.0% | 18.0 | 3 | 1,046.7 | 3,140.2 |
- Vg = L × W × H (gross volume)
- Vv = Vg × (p/100) or measured void volume
- Vn = max(Vg − Vv, 0) (net volume)
- m = (Vn × ρ) + madd (mass per module)
- M = m × q (total mass for quantity)
- mlift = m × SF (design lift per module)
- Mlift = M × SF (design lift total)
- SF accounts for uncertainty and rigging
- All internal calculations use meters and kilograms
- Displayed units are converted at the end
- Select your dimension unit, then enter length, width, and height.
- Choose a material or enter a measured custom density.
- Deduct openings using a percent or a measured void volume.
- Add known accessory weights, then set quantity and safety factor.
- Press Calculate to see results above the form.
- Use Download CSV or Download PDF for sharing and records.
Weight drivers in modular construction
Module mass is governed by volume and density. A 2.4×1.2×2.7 m bounding box is 7.776 m³; at 2,400 kg/m³, gross mass trends near 18.7 t before deductions. Steel frames (7,850 kg/m³) can dominate even at low volumes, while timber panels (500–750 kg/m³) reduce handling demand. Accurate dimensions improve crane selection, trailer loading, and site sequencing.
Using void deductions for openings and service zones
Openings and recesses reduce net volume, but the deduction method must match available data. Percent deductions are useful during early design; many façade-heavy modules fall within 3–15% depending on glazing and shafts. Measured void volume is better for late-stage planning because large door cutouts or mechanical chases can be quantified directly. Keep deductions conservative when tolerances or as-built changes are still pending.
Add-ons, embeds, and fit-out allowances
Non-structural items often add significant weight: frames, brackets, MEP racks, insulation, and interior fit-out. On repeatable pods, add-ons may range 2–8% of the structural mass, but can exceed 300 kg for service-dense units. Capture known items as a single add-on figure, then update it with supplier submittals. This improves lift planning and reduces rework when logistics constraints tighten.
Safety factors for lifting and transport planning
Planning should separate calculated mass from design lift mass. A safety factor of 1.10–1.30 is common for uncertainty, moisture variation, and minor fabrication changes. Include rigging and spreader gear; slings, shackles, and lifting beams can add 20–80 kg or more per lift. For transport, verify axle limits and tie-down capacity using the total batch weight, not only per-module values.
Quality checks and documentation for traceable results
Validate results with a weighbridge or calibrated load cell when possible, then compare against calculated values. Differences of ±3–5% are common due to moisture, reinforcement variability, and finishing layers. Record the final dimensions, density basis, void assumptions, add-ons, quantity, and safety factor in your project file. Consistent documentation supports lifting plans, method statements, and safer site briefings. Capture as-built weights per module, then back-calculate effective density to refine future estimates, lift plans, and transport checks quickly.
FAQs
1) What does “module weight” mean in this calculator?
It is the estimated mass of one module, calculated from net volume and density, plus any entered add-ons. The calculator also provides total weight for quantity and a design lift weight using your safety factor.
2) Should I use material library density or custom density?
Use the library for early estimates. Use custom density when you have supplier data, mix design information, or measured weights. Custom inputs usually improve accuracy for precast, composites, and fit-out heavy modules.
3) When is percent void deduction appropriate?
Percent voids are useful during concept and schematic stages when openings are not fully quantified. Once major cutouts are known, switch to measured void volume to reduce uncertainty and avoid underestimating weight.
4) What should I include in add-ons?
Add-ons should include fixtures, embeds, frames, MEP equipment, linings, and anything not represented by the main volume and density. If rigging is constant per lift, you may add it here or treat it separately.
5) Why is there a safety factor, and how do I pick it?
The safety factor converts calculated mass to a conservative design lift mass. Many teams use 1.10–1.30 for planning, increasing it when moisture, fabrication changes, or incomplete scope may increase final weight.
6) How do the CSV and PDF downloads work?
After you calculate, the latest result is stored for the session. The download buttons export that stored result as a CSV table or a simple single-page PDF report for sharing and project records.