Showing posts with label VDC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VDC. Show all posts

Thursday, June 23, 2016

RTC Europe 2016 - Register Now




RTC Europe 2016 Registrations Open Can't view this email? View it online.
RTC Europe 2016
Registrations Open

Alfandega Centro de Congressos, Porto, Portugal
Thursday 20 - Saturday 22 October 2016
Dear Patrick,
Once again we ask you, are you ready for RTC Europe 2016? This time we announce that Registrations are now open! Hope your clicking finger is ready, because if you don't act fast, you'll miss out on the Early Bird registrations, which will give you a discount of €300. These do sell out in the blink of an eye. Early Bird will be available till Thursday 7 July 11.59pm (GMT) unless sold out earlier.  
If you do miss the Early Bird price, don't worry, you can still get a discount of €200. You are eligible for this if there are 5 or more people attending from your company.
A Full Conference Delegate Registration will give you access to:
  • 3 days of plenary sessions;
  • Concurrent sessions that you've signed up for;
  • Lab sessions (if you've registered for any);
  • Catering
  • All social functions - Welcome Function on Thursday, Friday Evening Function and Gala Dinner.
Still unsure about attending? Have a look at our Program line up and get a glimpse of all the classes and their incredible speakers.
Don't miss out on the opportunity to attend, what we expect to be our biggest European Conference, ever!
In even bigger news, for the FIRST time ever, we are bringing the Building Content Summit (BCS) to Europe! An event dedicated to improving BIM content by bringing together thought leaders from around the worlds of Design, Manufacturing and Software/Services. Mark it in your calendars, that this will take place on Wednesday 19 October.
REGISTER NOW
The RTC Europe 2016 Committee and I look forward to seeing you in Porto, this October!
Sincerely,
Wesley Benn
Event Chairman, RTC Europe 

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"Excellent Conference, with lots to take away and implement at work. Thanks very much."
Luke Hamilton
Swindale Associates
RTC 2015 Europe
Delegate


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Thursday, June 9, 2016

BIMForum - Call for Speakers and Spnsors

The BIMForum is not accepting proposals for the Fall BIMForum conference, October 17-19, 2016 in Atlanta, Georgia, USA.



The Fall BIMForum will explore best practices in professional coordination from Architects, Engineers, Builders and Owners. We encourage proposals to thoughtfully consider how project stakeholders have addressed the following:

Establishing a collaborative environment
Organizing the coordination process
Conducting truly effective coordination meetings
Measuring the real-world results of professional coordination
Owners’ engagement in the coordination process
Design Assist and its impact on coordination
Handoff from design coordination to construction
Use of LOD (Levels of Development)

Submission Deadline: Friday, July 1, 2016 at 5:00pm EST
To submit, click here.






Monday, March 14, 2016

BIM in the Field

I have been looking for cost effective ways to bring BIM to the field wondering what options other people have found.

I have used Glue in the past, but it's very expensive. While I have not used it, I do have some colleagues that are using the MS Surface successfully. But I don't own a surface and not very many of those on the jobsite.

What have you used and what are the pros and cons?

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Repost: Beyond Design: Building Information Modeling: What’s in a Name?

Building Information Modeling: What’s in a Name?


Recently, I participated in the BIMForum in Boston, where the topic about "Design Optimization" drew a record crowd of professional attendees. Early and often, the presenters referenced "BIM" (Building Information Modeling) as a term or concept, with notable attention to the "I" (Information) in BIM as a key point of emphasis in successfully optimizing design.

The term Building Information Modeling (BIM) has been around over 20 years, and the concept of representing buildings digitally and spatially has been around about twice as long as that. You might think that a group of professionals dedicated to discussing and advancing BIM would be able to hover around a common definition for the term, or even a common term itself. Yet, there was more than enough perversion and variation of the term BIM to suit any number of viewpoints: painfully-redundant "BIM Models," not-quite-synonymous "Virtual Design and Construction," "Town Information Modeling" for urban planners, "Building Information Management Models" for facility owners and operators, and the horribly misleading 3D, 4D, 5D, 6D, 7D, etc for those who like to confuse things even further!

While it would be nice someday to settle on one term to rule them all, it became painfully clear that in 2014, we have a long way to go towards a standard term and definition for "BIM," much less agreeing on BIM standards for professional practice!

BIMs are 3-D models, but not all 3-D models are BIM.

BIM ≠ VDC

When explaining the subtle and not-so-subtle variations between these terms with owners, designers, and builders, I've found it useful to map out the domains of "BIM and "VDC" this way:

As you can see, "BIM" and "VDC" are not synonymous, nor should they be used interchangeably. When mapped this way, they describe and define similar but different concepts, and with BIM reaching horizontally across all phases of a building's life cycle, and VDC constrained to just two phases but can span vertically across multiple markets and project types. I am not arguing for the superiority of one term over the other, but rather: an attempt at clarity about when and why to use each term.

Department of Redundancy Department

Much has been made of the sorely redundant and all-too-often used term "BIM Model." It's as painful to my ears as the terms "ATM Machine," and "PIN Number." My colleagues developing and promoting BIM solutions are at least as guilty of using this embarrassing phrase as the myriads of professionals who echo the term and further its use. A handful of passionate and purist BIM professionals have campaigned and pleaded to curb its usage, from joking about killing #FluffyKittens, to implementing "BIM Model" swear jars.

But let's take it one step further. Is the term "Building Information Model" itself redundant? Consider the following breakdown and loose definitions of the components in the term "Building Information Model:"
Building, from Proto-Germanic buthlam "house"
The spatial, structural, and physical expression of values of an individual, organization, or society

Information, from Latin informare "to shape, form"
Act of giving shape, structure, form, or likeness to a value or concept

Model, from Latin modulus "a small measure, standard"
Spatial representation, likeness, or construction of a concept or set of relationships

If you look at these terms in this way, arguably all three terms describe loosely the same thing: a way we give meaningful expression or shape to a concept or value. In particular, we have significant redundancy between the meanings of "information" and "model." Are they interchangeable synonyms? No. But they have such overlap in meaning, we ought to consider a bit of reductionism for clarity.

It's a Model

We're decades into this BIM journey, and our industry ought to be ready to drop our second-millennium baggage, set aside the clay and foam core for our preschoolers and retired architects, and shorten the term "Building Information Model" to simply what it is and always was meant to be: the model.

With that point, let's go back to the recent importance of the "I" in BIM at the recent BIMForum. There, "information" was emphasized heavily in presentations and discussion about "Design Optimization," implying that one could not efficiently or effectively optimize a design with "dumb" or uninformed, geometry alone. However, the term "model" by itself is sufficient to represent the design intent; today's models appropriately include 3-D geometry, 2-D tabular arrays, and 1-D text strings to give them meaning and utility. We need not labor on the presence or emphasis of the "I" in BIM. Rather, we need to clarify our terminology, raise the ante of our expectations, reduce our cluttered vocabulary, and upgrade our use of "model" to a contemporary way of thinking.

It's just a model. Of course it is data-rich to be useful for design optimization, and a whole host of other BIM uses. If it wasn't embedded with meaningful data, it simply wouldn't be a model consistent with today's standard of care.

It's just a model. A digital one, a smart one, an enriched one, a useful one, a measurable one, comprehensive one, an accessible one, an enduring one, and one capable of simulating the full lifecycle of a project.

But it's not a BIM, a TIM, a FIM, a PIM, a BAM, a BIMM, or even a VDC artifact. It's a model.
What do you think? Is your firm ready to leave behind outdated terminology and uninformed representations of design, whether they're built of polygons or paper?

As an industry, are we ready to accept that a 21st-century model, without meaningful information associated and embedded, is insufficient to address our contemporary needs in planning, design, construction, and operations?

~Dace

Is anyone using Deep Space for analytics? https://www.deepspacesync.com/