| Literature DB >> 24324392 |
Robbert Anton Kivits1, Craig Furneaux.
Abstract
Building Information Modeling (BIM) is the use of virtual building information models to develop building design solutions and design documentation and to analyse construction processes. Recent advances in IT have enabled advanced knowledge management, which in turn facilitates sustainability and improves asset management in the civil construction industry. There are several important qualifiers and some disadvantages of the current suite of technologies. This paper outlines the benefits, enablers, and barriers associated with BIM and makes suggestions about how these issues may be addressed. The paper highlights the advantages of BIM, particularly the increased utility and speed, enhanced fault finding in all construction phases, and enhanced collaborations and visualisation of data. The paper additionally identifies a range of issues concerning the implementation of BIM as follows: IP, liability, risks, and contracts and the authenticity of users. Implementing BIM requires investment in new technology, skills training, and development of new ways of collaboration and Trade Practices concerns. However, when these challenges are overcome, BIM as a new information technology promises a new level of collaborative engineering knowledge management, designed to facilitate sustainability and asset management issues in design, construction, asset management practices, and eventually decommissioning for the civil engineering industry.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24324392 PMCID: PMC3844180 DOI: 10.1155/2013/983721
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
The application of BIM to the asset life cycle (adapted and expanded from Hartman and Fischer [3]*).
| Design | Construction | Operations/facilities management | Decommissioning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ensure the right facility is designed. | More productive crews, as there are fewer changes to the design once the construction has started, the ability to track work in real time, faster flow of resources, and site management. | Keep track of built asset. | Identify elements which can be recycled or those which require particular care (e.g., hazardous materials). |
*Hartman and Fischer [3] also argue that BIM can enhance procurement processes. However, procurement could apply to any or all of the construction phases discussed here. Likewise Building Smart (2007) argued that BIM had application for increasing the speed of Development Assessment approvals through local councils.
Figure 1BIM as the foundation to civil engineering sustainability and asset management improvement.
Overview of applications of BIM in the current and past projects.
| Project or organisation | Role of BIM within the project |
|---|---|
| The Sydney Opera House [ | BIM as a support for integrated facility management |
| The Construction Operations Building Information Exchange (COBIE) project [ | COBIE is creating a standardized content and format for information handover to operations and maintenance, as a part of the U.S. National BIM standard (NBIMS) |
| Public schools in Bourgogne (France) [ | All the public schools of the region will progressively become available in IFC format (CADOLE project, funded by the region as facility manager) |
| US General Services Administration (GSA) [ | The GSA has created its own 3D-4D BIM Program. Starting from 2007, the GSA has mandated the use of interoperability and IFC for all major projects. This followed a pilot study which tested BIM on 9 separate projects |
| The US Pentagon Renovation and Construction Program (PENREN) [ | The US PENREN Program uses the diagnostic Postoccupancy Evaluation (POE) process which systematically evaluates the performance of built assets after they have been built and occupied for a length of time |
| The Airbus restaurant in France | Main purpose: to populate the FM system with IFC files provided by the designers |
| The Freedom Tower in New York City [ | When completed, the Freedom Tower will be 1,776 feet tall, the world's tallest built asset, and contain approximately 2.6 million square feet. Given the high visibility and aggressive schedule associated with such a large, complex project, SOM's commitment to a full BIM approach to the project is both a bold bet and the only realistic way to deliver on the unique demands of this project |
| The UK Process Protocol model [ | Based on a 2D model, the process protocol adopts a normative approach to inspire companies to use a more disciplined strategy to project management |
| The model from the Finnish Construction Process [ | The Technical Research Centre of Finland created a model that followed existing practice quite close, since the input consisted of checklists of tasks produced by the Built asset Information Institute, which are the ‘‘de facto” standard in Finland |
| The IBPM of Pennsylvania State University [ | The work carried out by the Pennsylvania State University has a large influence on the later work in formalised modelling technology. It was carried out with close collaboration with industry and real projects |
| The Dutch ‘‘Bouw informatie model” [ | They used BIM in essence as a design process model, intended to serve as a framework for describing information in the creation and modelling of the model |
| Queensland State Archives, Runcorn | This is pilot project conducted by the Department of Public Works where a 3D model was developed from 2D drawings and used for the design and construct phase. The project is currently being evaluated. A 4D construction scheduling was also a key element of this project |
| US Army Corps of Engineers | The US Army Corps of Engineers and a global engineering, procurement, and construction management (EPCM) firm,as a partnership, work together to develop new US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) project deliverable standards for BIM applications |
Overview of benefits of BIM to the asset life cycle stages.
| Planning | Construction | Facilities management | Decommissioning | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sydney Opera House | Faster and more effective processes. Information is more easily shared and reused/controlled whole-of-life costs and environmental data | Identify elements which can be recycled or those which require particular care (e.g., hazardous materials) | ||
| COBIE | Creating standardized content and format for information handover to construction | Better tracking of cost control and cash flow, particularly for large projects | Creating standardized content and format for information handover to operations and maintenance | Identify elements which can be recycled or those which require particular care (e.g., hazardous materials) |
| GSA BIM | Evaluate the design from many perspectives and through time | Enables demonstration of the construction process, including access and egress, traffic flows, site materials, machinery, and so forth | Capability to schedule maintenance and review maintenance history | Know the composition of structures prior to demolition |
| US Army Corps | Evaluate the design against building codes and sustainability before construction | More productive crews, as there are fewer changes to design once the construction has started, the ability to track work in real time, faster flow of resources, and site management | Manage the facility proactively | Identify elements which can be recycled or those which require particular care (e.g., hazardous materials) |
The benefits of using business information modelling.
| Benefit | Result |
|---|---|
| Increased utility and speed (in all phases) | Information is more easily shared, can be value-added, and reused |
| Enhanced collaborations (mainly in the design and construction phase) | Across discipline and organisation, built asset proposals can be rigorously analysed, simulations can be performed quickly, and performance benchmarked, enabling improved and innovative solutions |
| Better data quality (in all phases) | Documentation output is flexible and exploits automation. Requirements, design, construction, and operational information can be used in FM resulting in better management of assets |
| Visualisation of data (mainly in the design and construction phase) | The added value of 3D visualization leaves little room for misinterpretation by all parties involved, and it helps to realign their expectations |
| Enhanced fault finding (in all phases) | BIM greatly reduces conflict issues by integrating all the key systems into the model. Designing BIM systems can detect internal conflicts, and model viewing systems can detect and highlight conflicts between the models and other information imported into the viewer |
The key advantage of BIM is its accurate geometrical representation of all the parts of a built asset capturing all necessary and relevant data of every part in an integrated environment.
The disadvantages of built asset information modelling.
| Disadvantages of BIM | Description |
|---|---|
| A single detailed model | BIM does not allow alternative design options or the managing of ‘‘what if” scenarios. |
| Interoperability | One software standard needed. Often firms have their own software; for BIM, every firm needs to change to the same software standard throughout the entire built asset process. |
| Added work for the designer | For BIM to work ‘‘optima forma”, the designer needs to create the ‘‘rich” model. They will be drawing something that will form the foundations of a complete system analysis. This means a lot more work for the designer. |
| The size and complexity of BIM | The large size of BIM will require different means of data sharing, and real time access into the database will require broadband internet access, together with security of data being worked on. |
| Trade Practices implications | While some countries have mandated BIM, this is unlikely to occur in Australia, if this restricted trade. |
The barriers to the implementation of built asset information modelling.
| Barriers of implementation | Description |
|---|---|
| Issues concerning IP, liability, risks, and contracts | As the designer is responsible for the creation of the ‘‘rich” model that will be used throughout the process, this raises issues of who owns the IP, who is liable, what are the risks involved, and how will new contracts be structured? |
| Issues concerning the authenticity of users | Using electronic environments for tendering raises authenticity questions because manipulation of data may be possible, and the authenticity of users needs to be secured. |
| Costs | For designers, the economic advantages of BIM are less tangible. Yet, it is the designer, not the owner, that must adopt and invest in the new technology, So unless the designer shares in the economic benefits, the owner, not the designer, reaps the immediate benefits and the designer pays the price. Builders and owners benefit significantly from BIM. |
| Sociotechnical issues | Attention needs to be given to the socio-technical issues which arise from implementation of new technology, which results in new ways of doing business. |
| Skill issues | Access to BIM may be limited or inhibited by users either not having the capability or the ‘‘know how” in terms of connecting to the system. Obtaining sufficient level of knowledge and expertise that is required for BIM may be difficult and prohibitively expensive. |