Sunday 20 November 2016

Today there are numerous BIM guidelines, protocols and file formats to support the use BIM data on projects. For example IFC (Industry Foundation Classes) was developed by buildingSMART International as a neutral, non-proprietary data…
THEBIMHUB.COM

The Los Angeles Community College District (LACCD) serves Los Angeles, California, USA, and its neighboring cities. It is the largest community college…
THEBIMHUB.COM

Join Prompt AcademyToday and Become A BIM Professional!!!!!!!!!!!!

BIM Management Handbook : Author: David Shepherd



This Handbook provides an authoritative and practical road map for those implementing and managing BIM workflows. With the 2016 deadline for BIM level 2 fast approaching and the growing realisation of the huge benefits BIM brings these skills are increasingly becoming industry essentials. This will help you to adapt by clearly, and without jargon, explaining standard BIM processes, Government standards and the effective coordination of design, construction and asset information. Spanning both organisational strategy and day-to-day practical tasks it explores bottom line business reasoning as well as potential risks and challenges.
This is the go-to guide for BIM coordinators and managers, architectural principals, design team leaders and architectural technicians that will ensure you are ‘BIM ready’ in 2016. It will also be invaluable for students of architecture and BIM getting to grips with strategy and implementation.

Wednesday 9 November 2016

What is a combined BIM model and why would a contractor need one?

Every contractor knows that winning new projects is not an easy task in today’s highly competitive business environment. To win the game, the contractor needs to have the right price, be able to point out key risks that can arise in the course of construction work and clearly differentiate from the competitors by providing the ‘little extra something’ that the owner considers an additional value.
In this blog series, I’ll explain, how modern BIM and virtual design software provide contractors with new means to identify the critical risks, compete with price without scarifying the margin and finally, prepare and present the winning proposal.

What is a combined BIM model and why would a contractor need one?

As a contractor, it is naturally in your main interests that all of the designed technical elements fit together and can actually be constructed on site. That is why paper-based plans or incomplete design data provided by the project owner usually mean extra work before you can give an accurate proposal. We all know that a proposal, which doesn’t fully cover all of the construction steps, is likely to cause big headaches when the building starts on site.
Often the project owner may have an abundance of designs – for instance, separate designs for bridges, intersections and underground pipelines – and all of these designed with different software and in different data formats. A thorough analysis of the key elements is likely to take a lot of time – unless you can create a combined BIM model and use that on the basis of your proposal.
A combined BIM model allows you to look at the key designs all in one view showing in a concrete manner, how both designed and existing structures actually fit together. Are there, for instance, underlying elements that should be considered when the work starts on site?

A combined BIM model allows your project team
to visually analyze constructability,
understand the costs involved and

come up with the best solution to build.


The best-of-breed software (such as our VDC Explorer) can combine data from multiple different data formats, for instance, open data formats like LandXML or IFC commonly used for combining technical systems. With the combined BIM model in place, you can base your proposal on an actual digital prototype of the construction project that helps the whole project team to visually analyze constructability, understand the costs involved and come up with the best solution to build.