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Contractors Scrambling To Master 3-D
Modeling Technologies
THE FUTURE IS NOW
Some contractors are using 3-D and
4-D modeling on their complex projects now and more will adopt
the technology as owners start to demand it
By Mary Buckner Powers
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Top: The final step in 3-D
modeling shows all connection elements such as plates,
channels and bolts in their connected state.
Bottom: A complete hung-shape, connected 3D model
of the superstructure of the Denver Art Museum expansion. |
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It's coming and there's no stopping it. The only question
is when will it get here. It's building information modeling,
which produces three-dimensional, four-dimensional and even
five-dimensional views of a construction project. Models are
filled with information that can speed up estimating, help
schedule work crews, fix problems before they reach the field,
track the progress of work, detect clashes and show the properties
associated with objects in a design.
But these new tools face the same simple obstacles that computer-aided
design did 15 years ago.
"We've got old dogs and new tricks here," says
David Hanson, senior vice president of Walbridge Aldinger
Co., Detroit, and chairman of the Associated General Contractors'
private industry advisory council and a member of its BIM
task group.
It could take a generation for the cultural change-looking
at a project visually rather than trying to visualize it-to
take hold, Hanson says. A few companies are using BIM now
and more will adopt the technology as owners start to demand
it. Industry observers expect a boost in BIM use beginning
in October 2006 when the General Services Administration will
require companies to bid on its projects using the models.
A Complete Change
"If BIM fulfills its potential, it could change the
way we do business over the next 10 years," says John
Tocci, CEO of Tocci Building Corp., Woburn, Mass., and chairman
of AGC's BIM task group.
The Beck Group, Dallas, saw the new technology coming more
than 10 years ago, and in 1996 patented its own internal product,
says Brad Phillips, managing director of the firm's Atlanta-based
eastern division. Beck primarily uses the software to look
at building alternatives and costs. "We use it to help
clients make a go, no-go decision," Phillips says. "We
can have a model for them in minutes." Phillips says
the feedback loop often is slow and fragmented, and while
"it can take months with paper drawings, we're collapsing
it into a day."
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| A composite 3-D model of the steel-reinforced
concrete foundation wall, structural steel and plumbing
at the Denver Art Museum expansion project. This represents
coordination with foundation wall sleeve penetration and
beam penetration. |
As owners begin to see the value in the models, they will
begin to push it down to construction, say industry officials.
Historically, owners have seen the bright line separating
architecture and construction as a healthy adversarial balance
between design integrity and costs. But it is the coordination
between design and construction that gives building information
modeling value.
Some owners already see the benefits of collaborative design,
says Davis Chaviere, principal and chief information officer
for Dallas-based HKS. For example, a model built for one project
from the architect's two-dimensional model captured a large
number of potential problems, he says. "The owner thought
it was worthwhile. Our fees were more than covered by the
savings," Chaviere notes.
Coordination
In the last five years, the focus of modeling has shifted
from the design side of the business to the construction side
and to the coordination of the two, says Chaviere. "And
the devil is, in fact, the architect, who is usually conservative
and tends to be behind the curve when it comes to technology,"
he says.
Some architects are reluctant to add the information to their
models that the contractor needs. They argue that at the time
they are doing their models, the specific information the
builder needs is not available, says Chaviere. But they also
insist that adding specific building information could transfer
the building risk to the architect. "The question on
the table is, 'If we give a model to a contractor and there
are errors, what would be the liability?'" he says.
In a sense, the jump from CAD to 3-D modeling is much bigger
than the move from manual drawings to CAD, says Chaviere.
"What we are talking about is extending the process outside
the architect's office," he says.

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| Webcor Builders is using building
information modeling on its highest profile project, the
new $370-million museum and research center for the California
Academy of Sciences, designed by architect Renzo Piano. |
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Coordinating work between the designer and the builder does
have benefits for the architect, says Chaviere. It ensures
that what is in the shop drawings is the same as what the
client thinks he's getting. "With the models, the designer
can keep the owner informed of how changes affect the design,"
Chaviere adds.
Supply Chain Management
Fluor Corp., Aliso Viejo, Calif., likens BIM to supply chain
management. "It's a set of processes, operations and
tools," says Ray Barnard, Fluor's chief information officer.
"It's not a product, it's a methodology." The ultimate
goal is to capture as much of the process as possible to eliminate
inefficiencies, he says.
Fluor is using a full suite of the technology for the complete
life cycle of a high-speed rail project in The Netherlands.
"The technology was critical in winning the work,"
says Barnard. It will model the full life cycle of the project
and ultimately will provide information for maintenance service.
A Fluor-led consortium has the contract to design-build-operate
and maintain the 62-mile-long rail system.
Until the architects and contractors agree to take a more
integrated approach in traditional design-bid-build projects,
contractors can easily build models from the architect's 2-D
drawings. The engineers and builders can add the data they
need for the functions they want.
But that also is the source of a problem. Several popular
specialized models now are available for HVAC, lighting design,
structural analysis and others that need detailed modeling
information, but they do not all speak the same language,
says Jim Bedrick, director of systems integration for Webcor
Builders, San Mateo, Calif. "Interoperability is the
biggest problem modeling faces now," says Bedrick. Such
challenges are worked out as they are identified.
"Development of a common language is in its adolescence,"
Bedrick says. Others are not so kind and consider the process
to develop a common language slow and laborious.
The fact that computers do not deal well with approximate
information is another problem, says Bedrick. Finished construction
documents have exact information, but the design starts with
approximate information and moves to specific and exact information.
"We used to start with a napkin sketch and progress to
hard-line drawings," he says.
To deal with that problem, generic objects can be assigned
a range of costs. "Rather than saying an object costs
$100 plus or minus 5%, which doesn't tell us much, the models
say it costs between $95 and $105, which tells us the boundaries
of the building system," says Bedrick. The design can
be refined so more money is spent on the most important items.
The conservative building culture also is holding back the
new technology, says Bedrick. Because construction companies
cannot afford to botch a project, they are more likely to
go with the methods they know work rather than experiment
with new ones, he says.
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A Fluor-led consortium
is using a full suite of building information modeling
technology on a design-build-operate rail project in
The Netherlands. |
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Andrew Ball, Webcor's president and CEO, backs the new technology.
"It makes it easy for us," he says. Webcor is using
BIM on its highest-profile project, the new museum and research
center for the California Academy of Sciences, designed by
architect Renzo Piano. The 370,000-sq- ft, $370-million facility
in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park is scheduled to open in
late 2008. It incorporates environmentally responsible construction
technology and advanced seismic design and will replace some
structures that were damaged in the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.
Three new buildings and a historic one will act as table
legs to hold up an undulating roof covered with a layer of
planting that will prevent 2 million gallons of rainwater
a year from becoming stormwater runoff. Webcor has worked
with Graphisoft, Newton, Mass., for 18 months to develop the
model. "They honed the tool and we have a beautiful model
with an incredible level of detail," Bedrick says.
Webcor looked for design conflicts by integrating the model
into NavisWorks, which works well because it strips out unnecessary
information to look for clashes, Bedrick says. NavisWorks
also is a neutral environment that allows a variety of software,
no matter what their language, to work together looking for
clashes.
Benefits
The Academy of Sciences project is the most advanced BIM
used on any of Webcor's projects. It has a timeline that Graphisoft
developed for scheduling to test the coordination of work
by building trades when construction begins in September.
"Prior to this, 4-D models required so much labor they
were only good for presentations," says Bedrick.
Meanwhile, Graphisoft has moved from software company to
service provider, says Viktor Bullian, the company's director
of construction service. It will build construction models
for contractors to be used for estimating, scheduling, constructability
analysis and coordinating subcontractors. "It gives a
company the benefit of 3-D models without having to implement
the platform and train someone how to do it," Bullian
says. Graphisoft also is developing models for subcontractors
that integrate directly to the fabricator, eliminating the
need for shop drawings.
When designers build a model, a wall knows it is a wall,
and a window knows it is a window because it is coded to national
standards. The model's database describes how a wall should
be built and what materials are needed.
Based on an object's code, a recipe of materials and methods
automatically are assigned. The model then knows the number
of bricks and the number of hours it will take to build a
wall, as well as the cost. The model can be connected to an
accounting system, and the tasks can be put in a schedule.
In the end, the model will animate how the building will be
built and how long each task will take.
"It shows the progress of construction from the foundation
to the slab-on-grade to the walls coming together on the first
floor, the second floor and on up," Bullian says.
The model also can show what needs to be built over the next
few days, and the scheduling component can track how work
crews will progress from one floor to another. "It pulls
everything together, and the owners just love it," Bullian
says.
BIM is a technology that allows a more modern way of looking
at construction, says Jonathan Widney, president of NavisWorks,
Phoenix, Ariz. "It's a huge work change from the traditional
ways," he says. "Once contractors see the benefits,
such as fewer change orders and fewer requests for information,
and as projects become more profitable, they will come on
board."
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