Mortenson Construction has used building information
modeling, or BIM, in conjunction with virtual design and construction since
1998 when it started work on the Walt Disney Concert Hall project, a multi-award
winning structure with a curved steel frame in Los Angeles. The project team
found that BIM/VDC was essential in the project, in large part because it
helped them visualize complex sequences of work that before had only been
listed in an Excel worksheet or on a Gantt chart.
Since then, the company has worked on a multitude of
BIM/VDC projects beginning with the pre-planning process, through the design
and construction. It found that the process and technology enhances
communication among project stakeholders, increases productivity, improves
safety, reduces time and cuts costs. A team at Mortenson studied 18 of its
projects and created an infographic that shows their quantifiable
results, including the cost savings enjoyed by its clients.
Ricardo Khan is the director of integrated construction
at Mortenson. He offers his perspective on the uses, benefits and challenges of
BIM/VDC in this edited Q&A — and refers readers to the company’s whitepaper on BIM and VDC.
What do you find are the major advantages and
challenges of BIM?
The major advantage is improved communication through a
3D visual medium. Through improving communication, people can be more effective
at collaboration, which then drives enhanced decision making. BIM/VDC are tools
and processes that enable design and construction to be optimized so that cost
can be reduced, schedules shortened, rework minimized, and productivity,
quality and safety enhanced. Use of a virtual prototype helps identify
conflicts and resolve them virtually before they’re encountered on the jobsite.
BIM allows project teams to better control risk by enhancing agility through
the virtual process.
The biggest challenge is that using BIM requires a change
in behavior, not just in process. 3 benefits of BIMThe transition from 2D hand
drafting to CAD was essentially converting to the same process on an electronic
platform; BIM requires a departure from the traditional 2D
plan/elevation/section process, which allowed for acceptable interpretation.
The 3D BIM environment requires more thought as the elements are parametric and
host information and more importantly, the third dimension.
In order for BIM/VDC to be successful, it has to be
driven into the field so that it will support the operational needs of the
team. In order for the field to be successful, BIM/VDC must be used during the
design process to drive early decisions that will avoid issues in the field.
Construction optimization starts in design and is realized in the field.
What is the biggest challenge in using BIM through the
supply chain, from owners to architects to the general contractor and
subcontractors?
Adoption of BIM is still not standard practice even
though its adoption has increased dramatically over the last four years. But
the various levels of adoption can pose challenges. We have noticed that
projects where all those in the supply chain are high BIM/VDC adopters have
more collaboration and higher performance during design and construction, in
the end driving higher value to our customers.
The other hurdle is technology. There is just so much of
it and there is a lack of software/hardware interoperability.
Have you found that the use of digital tools enhance
jobsite communication and increase productivity (or decrease non-productive
time)?
Absolutely! Digital tools like BIM and VDC, mobile
technology and cloud solutions are transforming the way we plan and manage our
work.
How do you effectively communicate digital tools to those
on the jobsite?
BIM/VDC has become the central medium in which we
visualize the design, integrate into planning, and leverage to validate in the
field. We use 4D Phase planning to visually communicate the schedule to project
stakeholders. We use 3D Coordination to help visually resolve conflicts with
building systems. BIM_benefitsThe project team leverages the output of BIM/VDC to
plan, verify, execute and manage work.
Everyone on a jobsite will have access to BIM/VDC outputs
— project managers, execs, engineers, everyone. The project members who
generate the information provide that data to the team. Project engineers then
leverage the outputs for their workflow to track scopes of work. Supers have
the output so they can use it as part of their planning to develop the work
schedule. Project managers use it to help communication with trade partners and
customers. And we use it in the office, too, at our team meetings among
stakeholders to explain where we are and where we’re going and issues that the
model has identified.
The visual side really allows the team to transparently
track progress, and its helps us make informed and timely decisions, which
results in the project team then deliver higher-quality work on budget.
BIM/VDC is great but we must to tie it back to business
case and values. It helps us optimize design and construction and control time,
cost and productivity to meet customer requirements.
Source: smartblogs.com
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