MMC Megafactory Economics: The Platform Cost Model
The Megafactory is not a project cost. It is a platform asset. Hub machines are built once. Dies are made once per project. Pours are the only true marginal cost. Cost per module falls with every project the platform runs.
1. The Three Cost Layers
Every module produced by the MMC Megafactory carries costs from three distinct layers. Understanding which layer a cost belongs to determines how it behaves as the platform scales across projects.
| Layer | What it covers | When incurred | How it spreads | Behaviour at scale |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Layer 1 — The Hub | Casting machines, robotic assembly lines, re-melt furnaces, control systems, civil facility, commissioning | Once — before Project 1 begins | Depreciated across every module ever produced by the Hub, across all projects | Approaches zero per module as total lifetime production grows. By Project 5+, effectively free. |
| Layer 2 — The Dies | Die sets for each module type in the project: skin dies, rib jigs, injection tooling specific to that project's module geometry | Once per project — before that project's production begins | Amortised across all modules of that type produced in that project | Falls sharply with module volume. A die set producing 75,000 rings costs a fraction per ring vs 5,000 rings. Cheap relative to Hub. |
| Layer 3 — The Pours | Die-casting alloy (skin material), concrete mix (aggregate, cement, water), Spoke operating costs, labour, energy, consumables | Per module, continuously through production | Direct variable cost — proportional to volume | Unit cost falls modestly with volume (bulk material purchasing, Spoke efficiency). This is the floor cost that cannot be avoided. |
The key insight: only Layer 3 is truly unavoidable per module. Layers 1 and 2 are fixed costs that spread across volume. The more modules the platform produces — across more projects, more corridors, more countries — the thinner those fixed costs spread, and the lower the cost per module falls.
This is not an unusual economic structure. It is exactly how automotive manufacturing works. The press tooling (dies) and the factory (Hub) are fixed costs spread across production volume. The steel, paint, and assembly labour are variable. A car factory producing 500,000 vehicles per year has a fundamentally different cost structure than one producing 50,000 — even if the variable cost per car is similar.
2. Layer 1 — Hub Capital Cost and Depreciation
From Memo 1, the MMC-TB 500 km worked example Hub capital is estimated at $130–260 M (excluding Spokes). This is the cost of the casting machines, robotic lines, re-melt furnaces, control systems, and civil facility. It is paid once, before Project 1.
2.1 What the Hub Capital Buys
| Component | Indicative cost | Design life | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Die-casting machines (×5 stations) | $25–50 M | 20–30 years | Industrial die-casting equipment; well-established industry; long service life with maintenance |
| Robotic assembly systems | $20–40 M | 15–20 years | 6-axis industrial robots; reprogrammable for any module geometry |
| Re-melt furnaces and skin recovery | $15–30 M | 20+ years | Standard industrial furnace equipment |
| Concrete injection systems | $10–20 M | 15–20 years | Pumping, mixing, and injection equipment |
| Control systems | $10–20 M | 10–15 years (upgradeable) | Software and hardware; upgradeable without replacing physical plant |
| Civil facility (8–12 ha) | $30–60 M | 50+ years | Industrial buildings; concrete slab; rail spur; power supply |
| Hub total (excl. Spokes) | $110–220 M | 20+ years average | Conservatively 20-year useful life for depreciation purposes |
2.2 Hub Depreciation Per Module
Using the mid-point Hub capital of $165 M and a 20-year depreciation period, the annual Hub depreciation charge is ~$8.25 M/year. If the Hub runs two 3-year projects per decade (a conservative assumption), it produces approximately:
| Scenario | Projects over 20 years | Total modules (at 115K/project) | Hub depreciation per module |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative (2 projects/decade) | 4 projects | 460,000 modules | ~$358/module |
| Moderate (3 projects/decade) | 6 projects | 690,000 modules | ~$239/module |
| Active (mixed scale; 1 large + 3 small/decade) | 8 projects | ~1.2 M modules | ~$138/module |
| Platform at scale (global pipeline) | 15+ projects | 3 M+ modules | <$55/module |
The Hub depreciation per module is not the dominant cost even at conservative utilisation. It becomes trivial at platform scale. The machines do not wear out quickly — a die-casting machine running two shifts per day in a controlled factory environment has a realistic service life of 20–30 years with scheduled maintenance. The Hub is a one-generation capital investment.
2.3 The Hub Is Reprogrammable, Not Replaced
The critical property of the Hub's physical plant is that it is geometry-agnostic. The die-casting machines do not care what shape the die is. The robotic assembly lines are reprogrammable for any module geometry. The re-melt furnaces process any alloy mix. The concrete injection systems pump any approved mix design.
When a new project arrives with different module geometries — different tower type, different corridor, different country — the Hub does not need new machines. It needs new dies (Layer 2) and new software programs for the robots. The physical plant continues. This is the fundamental difference between a project-specific factory and a platform Hub.
3. Layer 2 — Die Costs Per Project
Dies are the geometric interfaces between the Hub's machines and each project's specific module designs. A new project with new module geometries requires a new die set. Dies are manufactured once per project. They are project-specific but machine-universal — the same die-casting machines run any die.
3.1 What a Die Set Costs
Die cost depends on the complexity of the skin geometry, the size of the piece, and the number of die sets required for that module type. Industrial die-casting tooling costs are well-established:
| Module type | Skin complexity | Die set cost (indicative) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Caisson ring segment (4 m dia, 1 m high) | Low — hollow cylinder, minimal features | $200K–500K per die set | Simple geometry; 4–8 curved panel sub-dies that nest |
| Pile cap / anchor cap | Low-medium — rectangular with cast-in sockets | $300K–700K per die set | Box geometry; socket positions are precision features |
| Column segment (tapered, per level) | Medium — tapered cylinder, smooth profile | $400K–900K per die set | 6 die sets for a 6-level taper family; total $2.4M–5.4M |
| Cross-arm (concrete + steel rib) | High — complex 3D profile, hardware positions | $800K–2M per die set | Most complex skin in MMC-TB inventory |
| Cutter head (steel fabrication tooling) | Not a die — CNC fixtures, OD grinding jigs, insert fitting tooling | $800K–2M per project | One-off tooling per caisson OD; standardised size means reuse across identical projects |
3.2 Total Die Cost — MMC-TB 500 km Project
| Module type | Die sets required | Cost per die set | Total die cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cutter head (machining fixtures + jigs) | 1 set | $1.4 M (mid) | $1.4 M |
| Caisson ring segment | 1 | $350 K (mid) | $0.35 M |
| Caisson anchor cap | 1 | $500 K (mid) | $0.5 M |
| Pile cap | 1 | $500 K (mid) | $0.5 M |
| Column segments L1–L6 (6 die sets) | 6 | $650 K each (mid) | $3.9 M |
| Cross-arm | 1 | $1.4 M (mid) | $1.4 M |
| Total die set cost — MMC-TB project | 11 die sets | — | ~$8.15 M |
At $73 per module amortised across 110,000 P#7 modules, the die and tooling cost is modest. The cutter head machining fixtures add ~$1.4M to project tooling but are amortised separately across 5,000 cutter heads at ~$280/unit — trivial against the cutter head's fabrication cost. At a project scale of 550,000 P#7 modules (2,500 km corridor), the same die sets cost ~$15/module amortised — essentially negligible. And if a second identical project runs — same tower type, same module geometries, same caisson OD — both the dies and the cutter head machining fixtures are already made. Tooling cost for Project 2 (identical geometry) is zero.
3.3 Die Reuse and the Identical Project Advantage
Dies are durable tooling. A well-maintained die-casting die has a service life of hundreds of thousands of shots in automotive production. For MMC applications — where each die run produces far fewer pieces than an automotive component — the physical die can outlast multiple projects.
If a second client commissions an identical MMC-TB corridor — same tower height, same caisson diameter, same module geometry — the die sets already exist. Layer 2 cost for Project 2 (identical geometry) is essentially zero. The only new costs are Layer 3 (pours) plus Hub operating costs. This is a profound commercial advantage: the platform gets cheaper to deliver with each repeat order.
Even for non-identical projects, die sets often share sub-components. A caisson ring die for a 4 m diameter caisson may share panel geometry with a 4 m diameter in a different tower configuration. Die costs are not always fully additive across projects.
4. Layer 3 — Pour Cost Per Module
The pour cost is the true marginal cost of each module — the cost that cannot be avoided regardless of how many projects the Hub has run or how many dies already exist. It covers the physical materials consumed and the direct labour and energy to process them.
4.1 Pour Cost Components
| Component | What it covers | Indicative unit cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Die-casting alloy (skin) | Metal injected into skin die; partially recovered via re-melt (closed loop) | $40–120/module | Alloy loss per cycle ~5–15%; rest recovered. Alloy type governs cost. |
| Concrete mix (aggregate + cement + water) | Structural concrete injected at Hub or Spoke | $80–200/module | Varies by module size and mix design. Aggregate is cheap; cement is the cost driver. |
| Rib materials (rebar / additive) | Steel rebar or additively manufactured rib + accessories | $100–400/module | Wide range: simple rebar rib (cheap) to complex additive rib with many accessories (costly) |
| Energy (die-casting + cure + re-melt) | Electricity for machines, furnaces, cure heating | $20–60/module | Significant at scale; renewable energy supply reduces this |
| Spoke operating cost | Labour, equipment operating cost, local site | $50–150/module | For Spoke-produced modules; amortised across Spoke output |
| Hub labour (direct) | Machine operators, technicians, QC, crane operators | $30–80/module | High automation reduces direct labour significantly vs conventional precast |
| Total Layer 3 pour cost (P#7 modules) | — | $320–900/module | Simple caisson ring at low end; complex cross-arm at high end. Cutter head costed separately below. |
4.2 Pour Cost by Module Type — MMC-TB
| Module type | Complexity | Est. pour cost/module | Total qty | Total pour cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cutter head (steel fabrication line) | Not a pour — machined steel + hardened inserts | $1,500–3,500 fabrication cost | 5,000 | $7.5–17.5 M |
| Caisson ring segment | Low — simple cylinder | $300–450 | 75,000 | $22.5–33.75 M |
| Caisson anchor cap | Medium — precision sockets | $500–750 | 5,000 | $2.5–3.75 M |
| Pile cap | Medium — large, heavy | $600–900 | 5,000 | $3.0–4.5 M |
| Column segments L1–L6 | Low-medium — tapered hollow | $350–550 | 30,000 | $10.5–16.5 M |
| Cross-arm | High — complex 3D, steel rib | $700–1,100 | 5,000 | $3.5–5.5 M |
| Total P#7 pour cost | — | ~$390 avg | 110,000 | $43–65 M |
| Cutter head fabrication (steel line) | — | ~$2,500 avg | 5,000 | $7.5–17.5 M |
| Combined production cost (all items) | — | — | 115,000 units | $50.5–82.5 M |
The caisson ring dominates total pour cost at 65% of all modules — but its unit pour cost is the lowest in the inventory. This is the best possible situation: the highest-volume module is also the cheapest to pour, and it is ideally suited to Spoke production using local materials. The caisson ring is where volume economics operate most powerfully.
4b. Cutter Head Economics — The Steel Fabrication Line
The cutter head sits outside the P#7 pour cost model but follows the same platform logic: standardised design, dedicated line, mass production, cost driven by volume and repetition rather than bespoke fabrication.
4b.1 Why the Cutter Head Is Cheap at Volume
A bespoke specialist cutter head for a civil foundation project — one-off, designed and fabricated to order — costs $8,000–25,000+ per unit. This is the cost structure of the conventional market: each foundation is a separate engineering event, each cutter head is a custom item, the fabricator starts from scratch every time.
The MMC Hub cutter head is the opposite. Every unit in the project has the same outer diameter, the same insert pattern, the same body geometry, the same steel specification. The CNC machining centres run the same program for all 5,000 units. The OD grinder runs the same tolerance. The insert fitting station follows the same sequence. The line runs continuously for the full programme without a setup change.
| Cost element | Bespoke one-off | MMC Hub — 5,000 units | MMC Hub — 25,000 units |
|---|---|---|---|
| Design and engineering | $2,000–5,000/unit (full design each time) | $200/unit (one design, 5,000 units) | $40/unit (one design, 25,000 units) |
| CNC setup and fixturing | $1,000–3,000/unit (setup each time) | $80/unit (setup once, 5,000 runs) | $16/unit |
| Steel body fabrication | $3,000–8,000/unit | $800–1,200/unit (volume steel purchasing) | $700–1,000/unit |
| CNC machining | $1,500–4,000/unit | $400–700/unit (continuous run) | $350–600/unit |
| OD grinding | $500–1,500/unit | $150–300/unit | $120–250/unit |
| Insert fitting and QC | $500–1,500/unit | $200–400/unit | $180–350/unit |
| Total unit cost | $8,500–23,000 | $1,630–2,880 | $1,406–2,256 |
| Saving vs bespoke | — | 75–85% cheaper | 80–90% cheaper |
4b.2 Tooling Amortisation
The cutter head steel fabrication line requires one-off tooling — CNC fixtures, OD grinding jigs, insert fitting tooling — at an indicative cost of $800K–2M per project (for a given caisson OD). This is separate from the P#7 die sets but follows the same amortisation logic:
| Scenario | Tooling cost | Units produced | Tooling/unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| MMC-TB 500 km (5,000 cutter heads) | $1.4 M (mid) | 5,000 | $280/unit |
| MMC-TB 2,500 km (25,000 cutter heads) | $1.4 M (same tooling) | 25,000 | $56/unit |
| Project 2 — same caisson OD (5,000 units) | $0 (tooling already exists) | 5,000 | $0/unit |
If the second project uses the same caisson OD — which is likely if the same MMC-TB tower configuration is used — the cutter head tooling cost for Project 2 is zero. The fixtures, jigs, and CNC programs are already made and calibrated. The steel fabrication line starts producing from day one of the new project without a tooling investment.
4b.3 Cutter Head as a Consumable Revenue Stream
Cutter head inserts are replaceable wear items — they dull against rock and overburden and are swapped in the field. This creates an ongoing supply requirement throughout the construction programme, separate from the initial cutter head supply. The Hub steel fabrication line produces both the initial cutter heads and the replacement insert sets, generating continuous revenue from field operations through the drilling programme.
For a 500 km project with 5,000 foundations, assuming an average of 3–5 insert changes per foundation depending on ground conditions, the insert supply requirement is 15,000–25,000 insert sets over the programme. At $200–500 per insert set, this represents $3–12.5 M in additional Hub revenue that partially offsets Hub operating costs during the drilling phase.
5. Total Cost Per Module — Across the Project Lifecycle
Combining all three layers, the total cost per module for the MMC-TB 500 km project at different stages of the platform's life:
| Platform stage | Hub cost/module | Die cost/module | Pour cost/module | Total/module | vs conventional precast |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Project 1 (Hub not yet amortised) | $1,435 (full Hub capital ÷ 115K) | $71 | ~$400 (avg) | ~$1,906 | Conventional: $3,000–8,000. Still cheaper. |
| Project 2 (Hub 50% amortised) | ~$717 | $71 (new dies) or $0 (same geometry) | ~$400 | ~$1,188 | 40–60% cheaper than conventional |
| Project 4 (Hub 75% amortised) | ~$358 | $71 | ~$400 | ~$829 | 70–80% cheaper than conventional |
| Project 6+ (Hub fully depreciated) | ~$0 (maintenance only ~$50) | $71 | ~$400 | ~$521 | 85–90% cheaper than conventional |
| Platform at scale (large project, 575K modules) | ~$0 | ~$14 | ~$380 (bulk discount) | ~$394 | 90%+ cheaper than conventional |
Even at Project 1 — with the full Hub capital loaded onto the first 110,000 P#7 modules (plus 5,000 cutter heads on the steel line) — the blended cost per unit of ~$1,900 is below the low end of conventional precast pricing for comparable structural elements ($3,000+). By Project 6, the platform is producing modules at roughly one-sixth the conventional precast cost. This is not incremental improvement. It is a different cost structure entirely.
6. The Project Cost Trajectory — MMC-TB as Baseline
Using the MMC-TB 500 km project as the baseline (110,000 P#7 modules + 5,000 cutter heads, 3-year programme), the total production cost trajectory across sequential projects:
| Project | Hub capital charge | Die cost | Pour cost | Spoke capital | Total production cost | Cost/module |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Project 1 — MMC-TB 500 km (baseline) | $165 M | $8.15 M | $58 M (mid) | $60 M (3 Spokes) | $291 M | $2,530 |
| Project 2 — identical geometry, 500 km | $0 (amortised) | $0 (same dies) | $58 M | $30 M (Spokes redeployed) | $88 M | $765 |
| Project 3 — new geometry, 500 km | $0 | $8.15 M (new dies) | $58 M | $30 M | $96 M | $835 |
| Project 4 — large scale, 2,500 km | $0 | $8.15 M | $290 M | $120 M (10 Spokes) | $418 M | $726 |
Project 2 with identical geometry costs $88 M to produce what Project 1 costs $291 M to produce — a 70% cost reduction. The difference is entirely Hub capital and Spoke redeployment vs new Spoke build. The machines are already there. The dies are already made. The Spokes are packed up and moved to the new corridor. Only the pours are new costs.
6.1 Spoke Redeployment Economics
Spoke stations are designed to be temporary and relocatable. A Spoke that finishes Project 1 in Queensland does not need to be demolished — it is demobilised, transported, and recommissioned for Project 2 in the Northern Territory. The civil infrastructure (concrete pad, power connection) is left in place or written off. The valuable equipment — robotic injection systems, handling equipment, control systems — moves with the Spoke.
| Spoke cost item | Project 1 | Project 2 (redeployed) |
|---|---|---|
| Civil works (pad, power, access) | $8–15 M per Spoke | $8–15 M (new site civil) |
| Equipment (injection systems, robots, handling) | $12–35 M per Spoke | $2–5 M (transport, recommission) |
| Commissioning and mobilisation | $3–5 M | $1–2 M |
| Total per Spoke | $23–55 M | $11–22 M |
Spoke redeployment cost is approximately half the cost of a new Spoke build. Over a platform lifetime of 10+ projects, Spoke capital becomes a minor recurring cost rather than a major project expense.
7. Licensing Revenue as Hub Cost Offset
The Hub operates between projects — there will be periods when it is not running at full capacity on a direct MMC project. During these periods, the Hub can generate licensing revenue by producing P#7 skin and rib components for third-party construction firms operating under commercial licence.
A licensed precast yard building conventional infrastructure — bridges, retaining walls, culverts — under P#7 licence receives skin and rib kits from the Hub, injects local concrete, and produces superior structural elements at lower cost than conventional methods. The Hub charges a licence fee per kit.
| Licensing scenario | Hub utilisation between projects | Indicative revenue | Effect on platform economics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hub idle between projects | 0% | $0 | Full Hub operating cost is a sunk cost between projects |
| Hub at 30% capacity for licensing | 30% | $15–40 M/year | Partially offsets Hub operating cost (~$8–15 M/year) |
| Hub at 60% capacity for licensing | 60% | $30–80 M/year | Hub operating cost fully covered; may contribute to Hub capital recovery |
A Hub running licensing production between MMC projects is not a secondary activity — it is a deliberate platform strategy. The incremental cost of running the machines for a licensed client is Layer 3 only (materials + energy + labour). The machines are already there, already staffed, already maintained. The licence fee covers Layer 3 plus a margin. Every licensing run reduces the effective Hub capital cost per MMC module.
8. The Platform Proposition for Project Clients
A project developer commissioning an MMC corridor is not buying a factory. They are buying access to an existing platform. The economics of that distinction are material:
| Cost element | Build your own factory | Use the MMC platform |
|---|---|---|
| Factory capital | Full Hub capital: $110–220 M | $0 — Hub already exists |
| Factory lead time | 18–24 months to design, build, commission | 0 months — Hub is operational |
| Die cost | Same: $8.15 M for MMC-TB dies | Same: $8.15 M |
| P#7 pour cost | Same: ~$54 M (110,000 modules) | Same: ~$54 M |
| Cutter head fabrication | Same: ~$12.5 M (5,000 units) | Same: ~$12.5 M |
| Spoke capital | Full build: $60 M (3 Spokes) | Redeployment: $30 M (if Spokes available) |
| Technology risk | First-of-kind factory: high risk | Proven platform: operating history |
| Total production cost (Project 2+) | $291 M (full factory every time) | $88–96 M (platform access) |
The platform proposition eliminates the largest single cost item — Hub capital — for every project after the first. It also eliminates factory lead time, which is a programme risk item: an 18-month factory build before any modules can be produced is 18 months of programme delay. A platform Hub is operational from day one of the project.
9. Cost Comparison with Conventional Precast
The conventional alternative to the MMC Megafactory is a collection of independent precast yards, each producing modules under conventional formwork-and-pour methods, each tendering competitively per lot. The comparison:
| Metric | Conventional precast yards | MMC Megafactory platform |
|---|---|---|
| Unit cost per module (simple, e.g. caisson ring) | $1,500–3,500 | $320–500 (pour cost + allocated Hub/die) |
| Unit cost — cutter head (precision steel) | $8,000–25,000+ (specialist fabrication) | $1,500–3,500 (Project 1+); same geometry = same cost, no tooling premium |
| Geometric precision | ±3–10 mm typical for precast; accessories positioned by hand | ±0.1–0.5 mm — governed by die-cast skin and 3D CAD rib |
| Accessory positioning | Manual; variable; QC-intensive | Rib-governed; sub-mm; 100% repeatable |
| Weather dependency | Significant — outdoor yards affected by temperature, rain | Zero — enclosed factory |
| Scale flexibility | Limited — each yard has fixed capacity; ramp-up slow | High — add Spoke stations; run additional shifts |
| Supply chain control | Multiple independent vendors; coordination risk | Single platform; unified production control |
| IP retention | None — designs tendered to market | Full — P#7 architecture retained by platform owner |
10. Summary — The Platform Cost Model in Three Sentences
The Hub is built once and runs for a generation — its capital cost spreads across every module it ever produces, approaching zero per module at platform scale. The dies are made once per project for roughly $8–15 M — a small fraction of project value, reusable for identical repeat projects at zero additional tooling cost. The pours are the only true marginal cost — materials and energy per module, at $320–1,000 depending on complexity, far below conventional precast pricing from the very first project.
11. Assumptions and Caveats
| Assumption | Basis | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| Hub capital $110–220 M (excl. Spokes) | Analogous industrial facilities; ±50% | Low — order-of-magnitude only |
| Die set costs as tabulated | Industrial die-casting tooling industry benchmarks | Medium — well-established industry; geometry-specific variation applies |
| Pour cost $320–1,000/module | Material cost estimates + analogous labour/energy benchmarks | Low-medium — module-specific; requires detailed BOM per module type |
| Hub design life 20+ years | Industrial die-casting equipment industry standard | High — well-established |
| Spoke redeployment at 50% of new build cost | Engineering judgement; relocatable industrial equipment | Medium — site-specific variation |
| Conventional precast $3,000–8,000/module | Australian precast industry pricing; structural elements | Medium — highly geometry and specification-dependent |
All figures in this memo are pre-feasibility grade (±50%). The purpose of this memo is to establish the structure of the cost model — which costs are fixed, which are variable, and how they behave at scale. The specific numbers require detailed engineering and commercial validation before they can be used for investment decisions.