Tally provides AEC professionals with insight into how
materials-related decisions made during design influence a building’s overall
ecological footprint
Architecture firm
KieranTimberlake, in conjunction with PE International and Autodesk
Sustainability Solutions, announce the commercial availability of Tally, a
software application for Revit that calculates the environmental impact of
building materials.
It is the only application to
be fully integrated into Revit, providing architects, engineers, and building
professionals with insight into how materials-related decisions made during
design influence a building’s overall ecological footprint.
Backed by the rigor and
credibility of GaBi data from PE International, the application enables life
cycle assessment (LCA) on demand, documenting information across eight life
cycle impact categories that align with LEED v4 and other rating systems.
The commercial release
follows a three-month public beta, in which nearly 500 users tested Tally and
provided feedback on a broad range of design scenarios.
Bringing Life Cycle Data to the Design Process
While working in a Revit
model, Tally users correlate modeled elements to a custom LCA database built on
GaBi, the largest environmental dataset for LCA used by leading corporations
worldwide for both internal and critically-reviewed published studies. The
database combines material attributes, assembly details, engineering and
architectural specifications with environmental impact data, including branded
information from manufacturer environmental product declarations (EPDs).
“Tally empowers design
professionals to evaluate product impacts early in the design phase, enabling
smarter material selection, and ultimately the construction of better,
high-performance buildings,” states Heather Gadonniex, director of strategic
business development for PE International.
“Tally addresses a range of
questions, whether comparing a whole building to a benchmark, exploring
variations in building massing or construction type, or selecting finishes,”
explains Roderick Bates, Tally development team leader at KieranTimberlake. “It
can show where the largest environmental impacts reside within a design, and
ways in which they compare across material options.”
Complete Bill of Materials
Buildings are composed of
thousands of parts, each with their own origins and manufacturing flows, not
all of which are accounted for in a Revit model. Tally helps paint a
comprehensive portrait of a building and the products that go into it.
The specific quantities of
materials like paint, sealants, fasteners, or grout not modeled in Revit are
essential to a life cycle assessment. Tally lets users assign materials and
quantities, then leverage the tool to perform material takeoffs and provide a
complete bill of goods for a building. Currently, no other environmental
assessment tool provides this function.
New enhancements and features
have been released in the commercial version:
- Data can now be added to a Revit template to save time and promote firm-wide consistency.
- Elements from linked models can be filtered by phase and workset.
- New assemblies have been added, including a wide array of cladding panels, complete with hardware and finishes.
- New materials have been added, including actual GaBi life cycle data from product manufacturer EPDs.
Source: BDC.com
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