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Research Article

Occupants Satisfaction Towards Building Maintenance of Low-Cost Building

Apartment In Kajang: Pilot survey

Siti Nurul Asma’ Mohd Nashruddin1*, Norsafiah Norazman2, Adi Irfan Che Ani3, Mohamad Sufian Hasim4

1,3Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment, University Kebangsaan Malaysia, Selangor, Malaysia 2School of Housing, Building and Planning, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia

4Faculty of Architecture, Planning and Surveying, Universiti Teknologi MARA, Shah Alam, Selangor, Malaysia Article History: Received: 10 November 2020; Revised: 12 January 2021; Accepted: 27 January 2021;

Published online: 05 April 2021

Abstract: A typical apartment in Malaysia, especially in urban areas such as Selangor and Kuala Lumpur, is usually categorized as a low-cost residential building. Commonly, to distinguish its classification in the aggressive apartment sector, maintenance management is key to enhancing its market value. Therefore, this study focuses on building apartment maintenance through user satisfaction in the Kajang region, Selangor. Among its research objective is to identify the maintenance team's critical challenges in a low-cost apartment. The research engaged the quantitative and qualitative approaches, where questionnaire surveys were distributed to forty-three (43) respondents and interview sessions with six (6) experts. The research findings illustrated that the current maintenance level was dissatisfactory due to a low maintenance level, reflected through the number of occupants’ complaints about the facilities, maintenance aspects, and obvious building defects. A limited number of workers and a lack of maintenance period for building services were consistently the chief culprits for the maintenance team's poor performance. Hence, overcoming these critical challenges would effectively improve the environment in a low-cost apartment building.

Keywords: Maintenance, Management, Residential, Satisfaction 1. Introduction

In recent years, several researchers determined that the cost of maintenance, cost efficiency, and company's strategy (Douglas 2016) affected the building life cycle cost (LCC) (Ruparathna et al., 2018). In this respect, good building maintenance tends to prolong the building's life span and delay the need for restoration, which is beneficial for social and environmental impact. Therefore, low cost-building conditions are essential for low-income groups in Malaysia, especially in rapidly developing areas such as Kuala Lumpur and Selangor that have a higher cost of living standards. Its maintenance efficiency ensures a higher level of local perception as low-cost buildings constitute flats, apartments, and condominiums that may attract other income communities.

Apart from being among the most basic components in life, residential housing is an essential aspect to livelihood where (Steenbakkers et al., 2018) mentioned that it satisfies a high (85%) individual needs compared to other criteria which are 70 percent for security, 50 percent love needs, 40 percent self-esteem and the lowest at 10% for self-actualization.

Besides, regarding (Riratanaphong & Limjaroensuk, 2020), user characteristics are one of the satisfactory terms required measuring. It serves to understand all the information to gain knowledge of residential satisfaction and building performance, including the building location aspect (Guidon et al., 2019). According to Z.-A. Ismail (2017), comprehensive inspections include the management level in Malaysia’s context, repairing method, technology use in building defect diagnosis, and defect identification (DI) process. However, DI in building maintenance here is still in median categories compared to other developed countries.

This paper, therefore, aims to study the quality of maintenance levels in low-cost buildings. It is designed to study users’ satisfaction level with maintenance management in low-cost apartment buildings through the resident’s feedback. It tries to identify the maintenance team's critical challenges at low-cost apartment buildings focusing on the Kajang region as a case study area. Findings can contribute to improving building management in the future.

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2. Literature Review

2.1 Importance of Building Maintenance

Maintenance has been defined as a combination of technical aspects and management acts' according to the British Standard Glossary of Term (3811:1993), such as supervision, intended to maintain objects in a state where they can perform the required function, repairs, and other tasks. In sum, (Nielsen 2016) states that the term quality of maintenance management is the central aspect affected by the operation of the building facilities and services. Moreover, (Ofori. I.. Duodu, 2015) argued that the factors that can influence building maintenance are its structural condition, toilet facilities, discharge of wastewater, roof components, exterior wall condition, switches condition, to name a few. According to Tahir, Nawi and Ibrahim (2016), poor maintenance of a building also contributes to energy inefficiency if not monitored properly. The neatly maintained building should undergone a series of maintenance activities to track and maintain critical building equipment in order to reduce damage, failure to operate, and to prevent unnecessary operating costs (Mohd Nawi, Tahir, & Yusoff, 2019).

Based on (Bubou et al. 2017), lack of repair or poor maintenance of a building will contribute to high costs in the component’s replacement that would further deteriorate its condition in the future. Buildings with many defects can also create an unpleasant environment that causes health problems for its residents and contributes to the rapid decline in the building façade.

Furthermore, building deterioration occurs due to neglect, ignorance, misuse, and insufficient support for building maintenance. Therefore, periodic maintenance guarantees a more robust condition of the building. This statement is supported by (Ganisen, Hakim Mohammed, Jawahr Nesan, & Kanniyapan, 2015), who opined that the maintenance scope has a considerable effect on the adequate performance of the maintenance system and the overall building. A study by (Mohammadi et al., 2018) also showed that the financial and maintenance aspects would depreciate the management organization’s image.

The table 1 below shows a summary of the maintenance definition obtained through a literature review. Table 1. Maintenance definition

2.2 Residential Satisfaction

Residential satisfaction is considered a lively and productive process, whereby the level of satisfaction varies with the criteria and accomplishments. Zhan et al., (2018) found that low-cost residential satisfaction relies on community factors, while other studies reporting that occupants’ satisfaction with the housing management agrees that adequate maintenance would offer a positive perspective and remove deficient management identity (Ogunbayo et al., 2018). Thus, high building performance improves residents’ satisfaction. Foregrounding previous researchers, in terms of satisfaction level, tenants accept that good administration and maintenance of public housing represents a positive image of governance, especially in the public sector. At the same time, it reduces common derogatory perceptions often labeled for public housing management. (Azimi & Esmaeilzadeh, 2017).

Table 2 illustrates the summary of key variables related to satisfaction.

DEFINITION SOURCES

Combination of technical aspects and management acts. British Standard (3811:1993)

Quality of maintenance Nielsen 2016

Factors influence the level of maintenance Ofori. I.. Duodu, 2015 Lack of repair

Maintenance scope

Bubou et al. 2017 Ganisen et al., 2015

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Figure 1. Residential Satisfaction variables

Sources: Azimi & Esmaeilzadeh 2017; Hassan, S. Z., Naeem, M. A., Waheed, A., & Thaheem, M. J. (2019) According to Azimi & Esmaeilzadeh (2017) and Hassan et al., 2019 (figure1) to assess the residential satisfaction of a building, feedback on the facilities, maintenance, and safety aspects of the users or resident is taken into account in the survey. As a result, the overall maintenance performance is determined by the satisfaction gauged from users and residents towards the building maintenance management.

Table 2. Factors of Satisfaction

2.3 Critical Challenges Faced by the Maintenance Team

As a consequence, maintenance problems typically arise and are the critical areas of the organization's challenges. The challenges faced by the maintenance team would significantly influence the level of maintenance quality of the building. One of these issues is the identification and coordination of the maintenance management team and the residents' involvement to ensure that the company is centered on its goals and objectives.

The several challenges faced by the maintenance team has been summarized, as shown in Table 3 below: Table 3. Critical challenges faced by the maintenance team

VARIABLES SOURCES

Community factors Zhan et al., 2018

Maintenance and management perspective Ogunbayo et al., 2018 Tenant perspective

Facilities, Maintenance & Safety

Azimi & Esmaeilzadeh, 2017 Azimi & Esmaeilzadeh 2017, Hassan et al., 2019

CHALLENGES SOURCES

Poor monitoring

Lack of trained maintenance staff Improper planning or scheduling A limited number of workers

Wanza & Nkuraru, 2016 Dalkilic, 2017

Al Nasseri& Aulin,2016 Dahlan & Zainuddin, 2018 The insufficient building services maintenance period Duan 2019, Khairina 2018

Lack of implementation of new technologies Ganisen et al., 2015, Z. A. Ismail, 2018 N. Ismail et al., 2015

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i) Poor Monitoring

According to (Wanza & Nkuraru, 2016), the performance of individuals or members of the maintenance team has to be evaluated from their tasks executed so that the strategy can help to enhance the employees' commitment. Less supervision by management would lower the level of efficiency, success, and quality of employees' work. Therefore, the supervisory team's evaluation is regarded as an assessment that would enable workers to get motivated and perform well within the required satisfactory quality and specification.

ii) Lack of Trained Maintenance Staffs

Dalkilic, (2017) clarified that maintenance personnel must be well trained, experienced, and properly trained to ensure the building and facilities' maintenance. This would indirectly support the fact that maintenance workers should generally be qualified to deal with various building defects and are aware of routine maintenance activities. Moreover, their expertise in handling particular kinds of maintenance equipment is essential to avoid any problems occurring in the future.

iii) Improper Planning or Scheduling

Based on (Al Nasseri & Aulin, 2016), the organization's mission is to create proper planning to deliver successful resource integration. Strategic planning is most often an initiative of the top management to develop the impact of the company. Besides that, the maintenance organization's goal is to deliver efficient programs and schedules that would substantially decrease the building services defects and focus on the successful operation of a building.

iv) A Limited Number of Workers

An insufficient number of workers, as defined by Dahlan & Zainuddin (2018), may reduce the organization's efficiency and, in the event of failure, may have an indirect effect on the building components. Thus, it will cause an increase in significant defects, thereby incurring more expensive maintenance procedures. Besides, adequate staff is essential for departments providing good services and establishing a high level of performance. Consequently, a limited number of maintenance technicians or workers in the maintenance office may slow down the repairing work, which would affect the planned maintenance schedule.

v) The Insufficient Building Services Maintenance Period

Research by Duan (2019) stated that working within scheduled time could reduce costs by considering the main aspects of performance frequency such as idleness, elimination of waste, approval rate, delay, queues, that would eliminate unnecessary actions. Moreover, Khairina (2018) mentioned that once the maintenance team fails to diagnosis the building items or components’ breakdowns of the building on time, problems will arise later. For example, maintenance workers will be required to fix the defects immediately after the diagnosis that affects the quality of workmanship without proper time of assessment. Therefore, the delay in repairing work or diagnosing the building defects can decrease the value of building services and its physical condition and indirectly affect the performance of the overall building system.

vi) Lack of Implementation of New Technologies

Applying new technologies in maintenance is essential to an organization. The management must be continuously educated, be concerned with, and allocate an upgraded maintenance process to ensure they can fulfill and accomplish clients' or residents' demands and satisfaction immediately through the use of the latest technology. Lack of implementation of new technologies will decrease the building performance level of maintenance, especially in an organization (Ganisen et al., 2015). Hence, the connection between Information and Communication Technology (ICT) helps smooth and effective building maintenance process. Based on the perception from Ganisen et al., 2015, a high percentage of ICT adoption ensures that maintenance work is more accurate and well organized because the technological applications can reduce errors and increase the performance level of the maintenance process. Besides, Ganisen et al. (2015) and N. Ismail et al., (2015) posit that advanced technology needs to be introduced in the management department immediately to meet clients' needs.

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3. Research Methodology

The compilation of data was either from published and unpublished information obtained from various sources such as articles, journals, reports, textbooks, and the internet. A combination of quantitative and qualitative approaches was used in the data analysis. To achieve this study's objective, a questionnaire survey was developed and distributed to the occupants of a selected low-cost apartment around the Kajang area. According to (Krejcie Morgan 1970), the suggested number of the smallest sample size of a population is 40 to 45, which means that the number of questionnaires distributed could be more than the suggested. Nonetheless, due to the research constraint, the survey was distributed to 45 residents of a low-cost apartment, whereby 43 survey feedback was collected from cooperative volunteers. Then, the collected data was analyzed using SPSS version 25.

In terms of the quantitative approach (Apuke 2017), the questionnaire was designed to gather information from occupants, including the owners and tenants, using descriptive statistics. The questionnaire was based on the five Likert-scale model to set respondents' agreement level into specific measurements. This scale is classified in the range of 1 to 5 for each respondent's evaluation of the level of maintenance satisfaction or a user perspective. The Likert scale distinguishes 1 as "Very dissatisfied," 2 as "Dissatisfied", 3 as "Neutral", 4 as "Satisfied," and 5 as "Very satisfied." This questionnaire was distributed to determine the level of occupants' satisfaction with the services rendered by the building management in relation to the level of building maintenance and to found out the difficulties encountered by the maintenance team. The results demonstrate the residents' level of satisfaction experience and informed the key obstacles the maintenance workers face to maintain the low-cost apartment.

To achieve objective two, the data was collected through semi-structured interviews between 6 experts within the management personnel. According to De Paulo (2000), the number of qualitative research samples is not essential as long it is broad enough to hear much of the perception that may be important for the study. Therefore, the information gathered was used to comprehend the survey questionnaire’s result further. The interviews contained various items such as interviewees profile, years of experience, and the maintenance practiced. Finally, content analysis and descriptive analysis were used to analyze the results of the interview session.

4. Result and Discussion

This section discusses the analysis of the questionnaire results and the interview session's findings that consist of three parts, namely Part A, determining the demographic profile of the practicing professionals and the extent of maintenance practiced at the low-cost building. Meanwhile, Part B comprises the findings on the level of users’ satisfaction regarding the low-cost apartment building's maintenance. Cronbach Alpha was used to measure the reliability of the results gathered. Finally, Part C estimated the percentage and frequency of critical challenges faced by the maintenance team.

Figure 2. Respondent classification of residents

7%

93% Respondents' Profile (N=43)

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Figure 2 outlines the demographic profile of the respondents. As indicated, most 93% (40 residents) of respondents are tenants, while only 7 percent or three residents are owners of their homes as long-term property investments.

Table 4. Respondent classification of the maintenance team

Table 4 shows the detail of the six experts interviewed. The session was conducted with the building manager, two-building executives, and three building technicians. As shown, all participants have more than five years of working experience in building maintenance. However, general maintenance inspections were reported as inconsistent, scheduled either every day, weekly, monthly or annual plans. Therefore, in a particular situation, ad-hoc maintenance will be applied based on the building defects condition.

In order to estimate the level of residents' satisfaction, the classification of the scale index adopted by M. Sondalini (2008) is identified in Table 5

Table 5. Classification of scale index

Table 6. The summary of the frequency scale for maintenance management and its classification by using the Likert Scale model

Characteristics Categories Frequent % Respondent

Position Building manager  Building executive/Supervisor  Building technician 1 2 3 16.66 33.33 50 Years ‘experiences  less than 5 years

 6-10 years  11-15 years  More than 15 years

0 5 0 1 0 83.33 0 16.66 Maintenance practice  Planned maintenance

 Unplanned maintenance  Ad-hoc maintenance 6 6 6 100 100 100

No Item Scale Index 1 Very dissatisfied 4.50 < mean index < 5.00 2 Dissatisfied 3.50 < mean index < 4.50 3 Neutral 2.50 < mean index < 3.50 4 Satisfied 1.50 < mean index < 2.50 5 Very Satisfied 1.00 < mean index < 1.50

ITEM MAINTENANCE MANAGEMENT

Satisfaction Level / Percentage (%) Very

dissatisfied

Dissatisfied Neutral Satisfied Very Satisfied FACILITIES

Accessibility Frequency 2 0 3 32 6

Percentage (%) 4.65 0 6.97 79.1 13.9

Garbage disposal Frequency 3 38 2 0 0

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Figure 3. The respondent response of satisfaction level to the maintenance management

As demonstrated in Table 6 and Figure 3, more than 50% of the apartment respondents expressed dissatisfaction regarding the garbage disposal facilities around their building, with a score of 88.37% or 38 respondents. This is because the garbage is usually picked up after every two days or sometimes until four days a week.

Water supply Frequency 4 36 3 0 0

Percentage (%) 9.30 83.72 6.97 0 0

Electricity Frequency 2 0 2 35 4

Percentage (%) 4.65 0 4.65 83.72 9.30

MAINTENANCE

Building maintenance Frequency 8 30 5 0 0

Percentage (%) 18.60 69.76 11.62 0 0

Street maintenance Frequency 8 32 3 0 0

Percentage (%) 18.60 74.42 6.97 0 0

Parking lot maintenance Frequency 9 30 4 0 0

Percentage (%) 20.93 69.76 9.30 0 0 SAFETY Security Frequency 12 29 0 2 0 Percentage (%) 27.91 67.44 0 4.65 0 Safety Frequency 10 28 0 5 0 Percentage (%) 23.26 65.12 0 11.63 0

Enforcement of rules Frequency 0 0 8 24 11

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Water supply also shared a sizeable dissatisfactory ratio, with 83.7 percent or 36 respondents complaining that they faced a shortage of primary sourced water. Almost all respondents claimed that the upper floor tenants faced more water shortages compared to the lower floors.

Respondents also reported their frustration with the maintenance aspects of the apartment. Thirty-two respondents (74.42%) criticized that the street maintenance was poor, with debris appearing along the street due to the building is near the main road. Many respondents complained that they were dissatisfied with the building maintenance and parking lot with a share score of 69.76% or 30 respondents. According to them, when residents lodge complaints about building defects, they need to wait an extended period before the problem is eventually resolved. The percentage also reflects the frustration regarding building defects and faults, or when some defects appear in the resident's unit that they need to repair themselves. These concerns involved, for example, toilet problems, ironmongery fixtures, or broken doors. However, since these issues occur in individual units, it does not fall under the management's responsibility, much to the tenants' grievances. In terms of the parking lot, the management or organization did not provide facilities' proper maintenance. The respondents also mentioned that most tenants need to park outside the premises due to inadequate parking provisions, causing issues like double parking.

Next, 83.72% or 35 respondents are satisfied with electricity maintenance because when residents complain of blackouts, for instance, the maintenance team or person in charge will quickly solve the problem after getting a call from a resident in an emergency.

However, most of the residents are dissatisfied with the security and safety aspects, with a large 67.44% or 29 respondents and 65.12% or 28 respondents expressing concern caused by frequent vehicle thefts within the residential area, especially motorcycles.

Nonetheless, the respondents favored the building management indicated by the score of enforcement of rules recording 55.81% or 24 respondents agreeability. This result verifies the interview session with experts who confirmed that the management would usually convey the residents' building regulations. Moreover, proper notification and written notices are commonly practiced with cone placements and signages nearest the entrance to communicate the repairing work in progress, thereby preventing possible accidents.

(Chua et al., 2018) suggests that in order to achieve good building maintenance, these indicators must be considered, such as customer service, maintenance costs deviation, time variance of maintenance work, and downtime rate. In addition, (Riratanaphong & Limjaroensuk, 2020) note that performance appraisal or level of maintenance relates to enabling the intervention approach to be used as a control method for unique attributes of building performance. Meanwhile, (E.C Fitch 1992) reported that measuring performance between service delivery of the management team and customer's satisfaction requires variance tools such as Key Performance Indicator (KPI) to measure performance between service delivery that may indirectly achieve benchmarking criteria. Hence, research findings demonstrate that management activities are indicative of the level of building maintenance displayed that affects building efficiency and tenants’ satisfaction considerably.

Indeed, a customer satisfaction survey is one of the most common performance measurement systems, whether in a product, business, or service industries. Hence, the theory is also applied to maintenance management (Piyush, Bhatt, & Pitroda, 2016). It is also reliable to assess the building's overall view (Milion, Alves, & Paliari, 2017). Moreover, experts interviewed informed that relative to other high-rise residential building forms, the low-cost apartment has minimal facilities, which influences most homeowners to rent out their units. According to (Ren & Folmer, 2017), most lower-cost residential building owners have other homes at more esteemed area.

Results of reliability analysis

Cronbach’s Alpha coefficient is suitable for evaluating the reliability of the variables. Based on Nunnaly (1978), it is described that the minimum value of Cronbach’s Alpha to be accepted as 0.6-0.7 displayed in Table 6.

Table 7. The Cronbach’s Alpha scale based on Nunnaly 1987

CRONBACH’S ALPHA INTERNAL CONSISTENCY α ≥ 0.9 Excellent (High-Stakes testing) 0.7 ≤ α < 0.9 Good (Low-Stakes testing) 0.6 ≤ α < 0.7 Acceptable

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Table 8. The Results of Reliability Analysis

Table 9. The Results of Cronbach’s alpha.

The results in Table 8 and Table 9 shows all Cronbach’s Alpha coefficient values exceeding 0.7 with accessibility at 0.77 is recorded by variables of garbage disposal 0.80, water supply 0.80, electrical supply 0.79, building maintenance 0.82, street maintenance 0.80, parking 0.77, security 0.79, safety 0.80 and enforcement of rules 0.81. This indirectly proves that all the variables involved in the research achieve internal consistency and display high reliability. This result can be used in assessing the suitability of variables developed to measure the level of satisfaction among residents on building maintenance management in terms of action and complaint feedback.

Table 10. Ranking of the challenges faced by the maintenance team that affected user satisfaction

Figure 4 The respondents' response to challenges faced by the maintenance team 0.5 ≤ α < 0.6 Poor

α < 0.5 Unacceptable

Cronbach’s Alpha Cronbach’s Alpha Based on Standardized Items N of Items

.814 .824 10 No Item RELIABILITY Cronbach’s alpha 1. User satisfaction Subscales 1. Accessibility 2. Garbage Disposal 3. Water Supply 4. Electrical Supply 5. Building Maintenance 6. Street Maintenance 7. Parking Lot Maintenance 8. Security 9. Safety 10.Enforcement of Rules 0.81 0.77 0.80 0.80 0.79 0.82 0.80 0.77 0.79 0.80 0.81

No Item Frequency % Respondent

1. Poor Monitoring 4 66.66

2. Lack of Trained Maintenance staffs 3 50

3. Improper Planning or Scheduling 1 16.66

4. A limited number of workers 6 100

5. Insufficient Building Services Maintenance Period 6 100 6. Lack of Implementation of New Technologies 5 83.33

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Table 10 and Figure 4 show the frequency and percentages of six critical challenges the maintenance team faced towards the level of user satisfaction that indirectly affects the perspective of maintenance. As indicated, the highest challenge for maintenance performance is the limited number of workers and inadequate period for building services that recorded a 100% agreeability rate.

Next, the lack of new technologies implementation scored a majority of 83.33% respondents agreement. Evidently, a few maintenance management companies still use the old approach because it is not costly. Residents must reach the office manager to complete the complaint form and wait for this processing procedure between 1-3 working days before appropriate action is taken. In contrast, other established companies have already computerized their system for submitting complaints procedures that considerably reduce the waiting period of assessment. Likewise, (Laumer et al., 2017) concluded that technology is essential to differentiate between the dimension of information quality to understand the end-user satisfaction and the resulting workarounds better when investigating any large-scale complaint or study at the same time taking rapid action. It indirectly simplifies the process and retains the building efficiency with better performance. Simultaneously, the maintenance team or management would obtain a higher confidence level from the building occupants.

Hence, poor monitoring recorded 66.66%, with half opined that the challenge is the lack of trained maintenance staff. Finally, improper planning or scheduling with 16.66% is the minimal seen challenge. These findings confirmed (Jongo et al., 2019) study that lack of preparation, poor communication, and lack of qualified project manager that comply with specifications influenced the percentage of building performance. Additionally, these factors indirectly affect users’ satisfaction, especially for those living at low-cost buildings because as (Dahlan et al., 2019) suggested that lack of maintenance will contribute to depressing environment that impacts users' everyday activities within the apartment's compound.

According to Liu et al. (2015), unsatisfactory organization observations will reduce the efficiency level towards the maintenance team's performance and quality of work. Therefore, the level of performative services also hinged on staff expertise and commitment level that will substantially raise the level of building services rendered. Ultimately, the standard of performance quality would benefit the image of the organization. Besides, (Ganisen et al., 2015) defined a successful operation of facilities as capable of boosting and preventing unnecessary aggravation for the end-users.

5. Conclusion

This paper summarises the findings on the current implementation of maintenance work undertaken by the maintenance management of low-cost building apartments to users' satisfaction in the Kajang region. Research findings indicate several issues in the maintenance and managerial aspects of the building that stems from the residents' dissatisfaction with the management or organization's maintenance. The typical issues being; the late intervention of maintenance work to solve the problems, extending to garbage disposal, water supply, building maintenance, parking lot, and street maintenance occurring around the building. From the interview sessions with the management team, it was evident that the poor performance level was primarily due to lack of staff, insufficient building maintenance period, and technological deficiency in practice.

The research is contributive towards academia but also essential as a reference for maintenance practice. By identifying the residents' satisfaction and needs, the management can identify their failures and course-correct their actions to offer substantially improved services in the future. Hence, this enhancement will indirectly minimize the risks of further complaints from the building occupants. Furthermore, future studies are recommended to focus on specific critical issues in enhancing maintenance management in terms of methods for lodging complaints that should be more systematic and user friendly.

6. Acknowledgment

I would like to express my appreciation to all organizations and individuals who volunteered and assisted directly and indirectly in providing good cooperation in completing this research.

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