Realising the many benefits of BIM across a construction organisation needs the support and contribution of many parties. While progress may be accelerated if there is a policy or directive from the very top, success throughout the business depends ultimately on the project delivery team(s) having the understanding of what BIM can contribute to the project benefits, how it can help meet client objectives and how it is best delivered.
Unless it has their buy-in and engagement, becoming an integral part of what they do, with the resources committed, having the skills and competencies to deliver, the benefits will be few and achievements unremarkable.
I have seen and heard of projects where the project team believes BIM is something done “in the corner” by the design manager. Others teams perceive BIM is something the “designers do” and does not impact on business as usual on site. Some believe BIM is all about clash detection. As important as that is, clash detection is only one of 60+ potential uses for BIM on a project.
In my experience the company leadership can set a policy and determine ambition but the bulk of the work and attention needs to be delivered through engaging with a number of levels to a wide spectrum of stakeholders.
Operations and project directors may ask “How do I implement it, how much will it cost? Where are my resources and how disruptive will it be for my teams. Has it been budgeted for? Does my team have time for training?” Team members may enquire how their role may differ in a BIM enabled project. “What training and support is available to me? Who do I call for help?”
All are valid questions. All need an answer if traction is to be achieved. Until all have been answered to the satisfaction of the team, progress will be slow and without clarity of purpose or support, scepticism and non commitment will remain in place.
While delivering to PAS1192:2 might not be simple and straightforward, in my experience it is not the lack of protocols, guidelines or data management expertise which is the stumbling block to success. It is the transformational skills needed to be adopted by all in the team to see, understand and do things a little differently which is the hardest part of the journey towards BIM integration and levering the potential benefits for all.
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