Openstage: A Low-Cost Motorized Microscope Stage with Sub ...
BIM IN PRACTICE - Australian Institute of ArchitectsQuantity and Cost extraction from BIMs •...
Transcript of BIM IN PRACTICE - Australian Institute of ArchitectsQuantity and Cost extraction from BIMs •...
Dr. Dominik Holzer
BIM IN PRACTICE Legal / Procurement / Collaboration / Outreach
AIA National Seminar Series 6
October/ November 2012
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Chair: BIM and IPD Steering Group
Introduction
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Summary
Introduction / Background
Legal and Procurement aspects of BIM
BIM Collaboration – The importance of BIM Management Plans
BIM Outreach to the industry – What BIM means for your Collaborators
Open Panel Discussion & audience participation
Closing Comments
Dr. Dominik Holzer
From hand to CAD to BIMNot just a change of media
Manual Drafting Machine: Stephen Lau CAD drawing: General Home BIM Housing Project, EYP Architects
Dr. Dominik Holzer
BIM – Uptake across AustraliaBased on empiric observations
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Australian BIM Initiatives
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Dispersing the myth about the silver bullet
Dr. Dominik Holzer
BIM – The Technology Revolution?Looking back in time - RUCAPS
Dr. Dominik Holzer
BIM - Focus on Policy, Process & PeopleIt’s not Technology that’s holding us back
Dr. Dominik Holzer
BIM in Practice Papers20 August 2012
Dr. Dominik Holzer
BIM & IPD Working Groups
Chris Needham (Chair), C3 Consulting Solutions
Stuart Bull, Arup
Tom Fussell, Project Services
Peter Giangiulio, Sandover Pinder
Neil Greenstreet, NATSPEC //
Construction Information
Clay Hickling, GHD
Paul Nunn, CSI Global Services
David Sutherland, Fender Katsalidis
Peter Scuderi (Chair), Arup
Richard Barton, AIA
Sam Bassilious, Rider Levett Bucknall
Warren Birchall, HASSELL
Chris Canham, Lend Lease
Andrew Chew, Corrs Chambers WG.
Fergus Hohnen, Woods Bagot
Kiri Parr, Arup
Wendy Poulton, Planned Professional
Risk Services
Philippa Sutton, Laing O'Rourke
Claudelle Taylor, Leightons / Nexus
Point Solutions
Bilal Succar (Chair),Change Agents
Carl Agar, Menco Electrical
Scott Beazley, Project Services
Paul Berkemeier, AIA
Richard Choy, NATSPEC //
Construction Information
Rosetta Di Giangregorio, RMIT/TAFE
Steven Donaghey, Suters Architects
Chris Linning, Sydney Opera House
Jennifer Macdonald, UTS
Rodd Perey, Architectus
Jim Plume, UNSW
Toby Maple (Chair), HASSELL
Glenn Cunnington, Humphrey +
Edwards
John Hainsworth, Arup
Belinda Hodkinson, Sinclair Knight
Merz
Daniel Jürgens, Cox Architecture
Peter Liebsch, Grimshaw
Darren Tims, Rice Daubney
Flavio Yamauti, Hansen Yuncken
Dr. Dominik Holzer
AIA/Consult Australia Documents
23 Practice Papers in total
Dr. Dominik Holzer
L1 - BIM and Intellectual Property
L2 - Professional Indemnity Insurance
L3 - Stakeholders' Responsibilities
L4 - Viable Options
BIM, Legal and Procurement
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Intellectual PropertyWho owns the BIM?
Ownership of IP can relate to many things including the documentation output, the underlying geometry, the embedded data in the model/s, workflow processes etc.
• Who should own IP – the creator or the end user?
• What the model is going to be used for has an impact on ownership.
• How can IP in models be regulated?
• Professional Service Agreements
• Model file formats
• ‘Design BIMs’ to ‘Construction BIMs’ to FM data
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Professional IndemnityExclusions
Do Professional Indemnity (PI) policies cover BIM?
• Principally yes
• Notify your insurer when using BIM
• Consider project specific policies
• Check if other consultants are covered
• Ensure the role of the BIM Coordinator is covered
What are the risk factors / exclusions?
• Agreeing to share risk
• Operating outside the insured profession
• Providing warranties
• Specific Software exclusions
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Professional Indemnityand Professional Services Agreements
The impact on BIM related claims on a firm’s PI insurance:
• Any claims should be minimised in order to avoid that insurers increase their premiums
• … or limit their exposure to BIM claims
Single Project Insurance:
• Start to become common in the US
• Usually only work for very large projects
• High excess (1M $)
• They are not necessarily a complete solution
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Stakeholders’ ResponsibilitiesIdentifying roles in a BIM context
• Who are the BIM authors?
• What are the individual authors’ inputs?
• What are the authors delivering?
• When do the authors have responsibility and liability for their respective content?
• Author identification and BIM specification
• Ideally in a the PSA
• Strongly aligned to the BMP
• The legal context to BIM Management Plans.
Image: Frank Kunert
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Viable Options Addressing Project Procurement
Traditional approaches to project procurement (such as design, bid-build) do not necessarily allow project teams to tap into the full potential of collaborating in BIM.
For a more collaborative working relationship, there are two very different alternatives to consider:
• Collaboration – an agreement on a single project or across many projects: each party remains liable only for its own work & risks
• Alliance contracting: each party shares the risk of the other parties' errors
Image: buildipedia
Dr. Dominik Holzer
P1 - What is a BIM Management Plan, and why should we use one?
P2 - What should be addressed within a BIM Management Plan?
P3 - How should you prepare and apply a BIM Management Plan?
BIM Management PlansRegulating the collaborative effort
Dr. Dominik Holzer
ARCHITECTS
CLIENTS
CONTRACTORS
ENGINEERS
Image: Prof. Mark Burry, Dominik Holzer
Prevailing thinking in silosof design professionals from varying background
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Mapping out specific BIM deliverableshttp://www.prlog.org/11823735/1Starting to comprehend the deliverables
LOD 100
LOD 200
LOD 300
LOD 400
LOD 500
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Image: NATSPEC Image: Penn State CIC Research Team Image: AIA/CA BIM Steering Group
BIM Management PlansRegulating the collaborative effort
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Defining Level of Development - Specifying BIM DeliverablesJim Bedrick, FAIA / AEC Process Engineering, James Vandezande, AIA / HOK
A BIM Management Plan:
• sets the scene’ and helps orchestrate activities and sequence.
• acknowledges the value of diligent planning, effective communication and genuine collaboration..
BIM Management PlansWhat is it and why should we use one?
Dr. Dominik Holzer
FM for Healthcare
A good BIM Management Plan should address:
• Who and what the document is for?
• Who is involved, and in what capacity?
• What is sought for the project ?
• What approach will be taken?
• How will the project be designed/built/managed?
• How will the project information be developed, exchanged, validated, used and re-used and over what period?
• What tools (software) and processes (BIM uses) will be used toward this purpose?
• How will those tools/processes be employed, by whom and when?
BIM Management PlansWhat is it and why should we use one? Image: MAAP
Dr. Dominik Holzer
FM for Healthcare
For best results in preparing a BIM Management Plan:
• be iterative
• be collaborative
• be structured
• Prioritise
• start with a template
• get buy-in
• get expert assistance
BIM Management PlansHow to prepare and apply a BIM Management Plan
Image: AIA/Consult Australia
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Detailed Design CoordinationAdvanced adoption of LOD for clarifying BIM deliverables
Image: E202, LOD and MEA, AIA
NDY Project Execution Plan Template, LOD 200 / 225 / 250 / 275
Dr. Dominik Holzer
O1 - Educating Clients
O2 - Architects and Building Designers
O3 - Engineers
O4 - Contractors/Builders
O5 - Quantity Surveyors & Cost Planners
O6 - Facilities Managers
O7 - Manufacturers and Suppliers
BIM Outreach
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Image: Autodesk
Information stewardship across various stakeholders
Closing the life-cycle loop
Dr. Dominik Holzer
BIM and the Building Lifecycle
FM for Healthcare
Image AEC Connect after: Marty Chobot, FM Systems & Chuck Mies, Autodesk
Cost to the building lifecycle
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Image: NBS (UK)
BIM for ClientsWhat to ask for when requesting BIM
There is potential for Clients to benefit from improvements in productivity through the adoption of a more integrated approach to project procurement.
• It is supported by the adoption of a BIM workflow methodology that mitigates risk and provides cost savings.
• The adoption of BIM presents a variety of considerations related to the procurement strategy. This is best lead by the Client in order to maximise the impact of potential advantages and savings.
Dr. Dominik Holzer
A Notional Chart of Life-Cycle Facility Costs after D.Smith, NIBS 2006
Value of BIM for Owner/Operators
Dr. Dominik Holzer
FM for Healthcare
BIM for Architects and Building DesignersWhat does BIM mean for their business?
• The true value of BIM is achieved when all consultants are involved early and contribute to the shared data set and the subsequent collaborative dialogue.
• The change in the workflow between disciplines caused by the implementation of BIM can be significant.
• Detailed Clash detection is a scope of work that falls outside of what may be considered as consultant coordination.
• If the deliverables are beyond traditional drawing sets contractual agreements need to be defined at the start of a project.
• BIM projects lead to the creation of new roles or responsibilities. Image: HASSELL
Dr. Dominik Holzer
FM for Healthcare
BIM for EngineersWhat does BIM mean for their business?
• Coordinate your design input with other consultants and the contractor
• Information can be stored in a database andmay be viewed in many ways
• Link your documentation models to your analysis models
• Focus on the design – build the model first, interact with model next, then produce formal documentation
Image: Arup
Dr. Dominik Holzer
FM for Healthcare
BIM for Contractors/BuildersFrom Schedules and Cost to Field BIM
• Interactive visualisation of the project.
• Overlay design and trade models.
• Model areas of risk, sensitivity or alternative approaches.
• Create sequences for rehearsal of the construction activities.
• Extract quantities for budget estimates.
• Use ‘Field BIM’ for setout on site and more
Image: Trimble
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Adelaide Oval, 4D BIM Baulerstone & Robert Bird Group
Dr. Dominik Holzer
FM for Healthcare
BIM for Quantity SurveyorsQuantity and Cost extraction from BIMs
• Utilising the early massing model for Stage A – brief stage cost (indicative cost) is beneficial
• Ask the design teams to assign an elemental cost parameter to all the elements in the BIM for costing as the model progresses through various project stages/phases
• Get the quantity surveyor involved with the design team early to advise on how to model correctly (no overlapping geometry) so accurate quantities can be derived
Image: Mitbrand
Dr. Dominik Holzer
FM for Healthcare
BIM for Facilities ManagersMaking use of intelligent building data
• Record Modelling – What is needed to form an informational link to where and at what stage? (COBie data drops)
• Realising the potential value:
• Building maintenance scheduling
• Building systems analysis
• Asset management
• Space management and tracking
• Disaster planning
• From BIM to EIM (Enterprise Information Modelling)
Image: Paul Metz
Dr. Dominik Holzer
BIM and the Building Lifecycle
FM for Healthcare
Image AEC Connect after: Marty Chobot, FM Systems & Chuck Mies, Autodesk
Contractors see theValue of BIM Very Differently
Owners see theValue of BIM Very Differently
During Design, the Value of BIM sits mostlywith the Geometry
Dr. Dominik Holzer
FM for Healthcare
BIM and BIG DataMaking use of intelligent building data1. Central repository of information2. Easily updateable by multiple users3. Filtered information and with
permission4. Being able to share information across
the enterprise5. Data to be saved across multiple
platforms (iFC, COBie)6. Different ways to display data across
different users7. Ability to harvest and analyse data8. Opportunity to collect data once, and
use it over and over again + accommodating updates
9. Better information earlier in the O&M planning process, and
10.Continue using that data throughout the entire lifecycle of the asset
Image: Lego Infographics
Dr. Dominik Holzer
The Importance of tagging informationTransfer of design intelligence through COBIE
COBIE standardises the data expected to
be shared with FM and CMMS systems
by defining the fields of data that
should be exported from a BIM model
into other applications. Sean Benson — ARCHIBUS (2009)
Image: AEC Connect
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Image: K.Onuma
BIM for Facilities ManagersFrom BIM to Enterprise Information Models
Dr. Dominik Holzer
BIM for ManufacturersProviding their products in a BIM realm
• Consultants are creatingthe same content across various firms. This is hugely wasteful. Manufacturers should create quality object libraries to represent their products.
• This content needs to be provided free to industry to eliminate duplication of effort & reduce waste.
• In doing so, manufacturers should adhere to existing industry standards (BIM MEP AUS and ANZRS) for BIM content creation.
• Access to quality BIM libraries would increase productivity. Consultants & trade contractors could concentrate on delivering sustainable buildings rather than building BIM content.
Image: HASSELL
Dr. Dominik Holzer
BIM for ManufacturersProviding their products in a BIM realm
Dr. Dominik Holzer
BIM / IPD Website bim.architecture.com.au
Dr. Dominik Holzer
BIM / IPD Website bim.architecture.com.au
Dr. Dominik Holzer
BIM / IPD Website bim.architecture.com.au
Dr. Dominik Holzer
Thank You
www.aecconnect.com