“…Jaselskis and Anderson (1995) investigated the applications and limitations of RFID technology in the construction industry, and attached read/ write RFID tags to the surfaces of concrete test that were cast from the job site to test lab. This RFID technology has been widely applied in many areas in the construction industries for the following reasons: (1) to provide owners and contractors with information to enhance operation using RFID technology (Jaselskis and 192 Tarek, 2003); (2) to propose a novel concept of " parts and packets unified architecture" in order to handle data or information related to a product carried by product itself by utilizing RFID technology (Yagi et al, 2005); (3) to apply RFID technology as a solution to problems in pipe spools, and identify potential economic benefits from adopting RFID technology in automated tracking ; (4) to apply RFID combined with GIS technology in order to locate precast concrete components with minimal worker input in the storage yard ; (5) to improve the efficiency of tracing tools and tool availability using RFID (Goodrum et al, 2006); (6) to develop mobile construction supply chain system integrated with RFID technology (Wang et al, 2006); (7) to describe a prototype of an advanced tower crane equipped with wireless video control and RFID technology (Lee et al, 2006); (8) to improve tracing of material on construction using materials tagged with RFID tags ; (9) to present strategy and information system to manage the progress control of structural steel works using RFID and 4D CAD (Chin et al, 2008); (10) to enhance precast production management system integrated with RFID application (Yin et al, 2009), and (11) to present a new methodology for managing construction document information using RFID-based semantic contexts (Elghamrawy and Boukamp, 2010). The use of technology to improve delivery process control is not a novel concept.…”