flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

4 projects honored with AIA TAP Innovation Awards for excellence in BIM and project delivery

BIM and Information Technology

4 projects honored with AIA TAP Innovation Awards for excellence in BIM and project delivery

Morphosis Architects' Emerson College building in Los Angeles and the University of Delaware’s ISE Lab are among the projects honored by AIA for their use of BIM/VDC tools.


By AIA | May 27, 2015
4 designs honored at AIA's TAP Innovation Awards

The three main massing elements (south bar, atrium, and north tower) are each designed with their own structural systems and floor-to-floor heights to maximize efficiencies. Image: Alene Davis

The American Institute of Architects (AIA) Technology in Architectural Practice (TAP) Knowledge Community developed the AIA TAP Innovation Awards to honor state of the art of the design, delivery, and management of the built environment as enabled by advanced processes and technologies.

TAP has spearheaded efforts to highlight case studies from the profession in the harnessing of BIM technology and processes to further design, construction, and project excellence. The AIA TAP Innovation Awards emphasizes how this array of new practices and technologies will further enable project delivery and enhance data-centric methodologies in the management of buildings for their entire lifecycle, from design, to construction, and through operations.

Categories for the TAP Innovation Awards include: Stellar Architecture, Delivery Process Excellence, Academic Program/Curriculum Development (none selected this year), and Exemplary use in a Small Firm.  

 

Category A – Stellar Architecture

Submissions in this category exhibited exemplary architectural design and display innovations in practices and technologies. 

Emerson College; Los Angeles
Morphosis Architects

An all-glass facade at street level invites students and the community to mingle at the public cafe. Image: Iwan Baan

 

Morphosis created a custom computational tool to layout key design elements that allowed for aesthetic and sustainable features to be developed in concert with each other. Anticipated to achieve a LEED Gold rating, this project delivers advanced energy efficiency features including radiant heating and cooling, window contacts to facilitate natural ventilation, operable sunshades, user controllability, and solar thermal collectors.

The project is expected to achieve a 15% energy cost savings over baseline figures and a 31% reduction of potable water use in all fixtures. Responding to local weather conditions, the automated sunshade system opens and closes horizontal fins outside the high-performance glass curtain-wall to minimize heat gain while maximizing daylight and views.  

 

 

Category B – Delivery Process Excellence

Submissions in this category exhibited outstanding examples of innovations in collaboration in the project delivery process to fulfill project goals. 

University of Delaware’s Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering Lab (ISE Lab);
Newark, Del.
Ayers Saint Gross

The building and site utilize best green practices, including capturing stormwater in the landscape. Image: Tom Holdsworth

 

The architect and consulting engineers developed 13 design models using BIM software, which were combined to allow a full understanding of how each building system affected the other. These models were constantly available to the construction management team and fabricators via the project cloud.

An open exchange of files between design and construction entities allowed the project to be completed 60 days ahead of schedule. Robotically-controlled bulldozers enabled a greater level of control for site grading and retention swales. A constantly evolving schedule was made possible by linking modeled elements to timelines, ensuring early or on-time completion of each phase of construction.

 

 

Honorable Mention 

OHSU/PSU/OSU Collaborative Life Sciences Building; Portland, Ore.
SERA Architects and CO Architects

The complex geometries of the building, including the atrium and its ramping system, were molded and coordinated in Revit and Navisworks. Image: Jeremy Bitterman

 

With 28 design teams in 10 states, the use of modeling software, file exchange software, cloud-based collaboration technology, and document management tools was critical to the project’s work flow. The entire construction team chose to collocate throughout the project, which allowed it to be conceived, constructed, and delivered in only 38 months.

During the latter stages of design, the architect, engineers, contractor, and subcontractors met frequently to hold clash-detection meetings, resolving system conflicts during design and easing the 3D model transition to the subcontractors. The design team calculated the total savings to the owner for their all-digital process was just under $10 million when accounting for print costs and labor hours.

 

 

Category D – Exemplary Use in a Small Firm

Submissions in this category exhibited exemplary improvements through application of progressive practices, innovative processes and advanced technologies in a firm of 10 or fewer members, at any stage(s) of the overall process of project feasibility assessment, programming, design, documentation, procurement, construction, and operation. 

D-Bridge
Point B Design

Visual voxels project structural voels' geometry into the interior, maximizing visual stimulation. Image: Point B Design

 

The D-Bridge is a yet-unbuilt architectural project and experimental structure that serves as an extension to a private gallery and residence. The core feature of the Bridge serves as both its form and structure with 1,000 laser-cut, folded cells made from flat sheets of stainless steel (voxels). By developing a cultural change in practice, the team has been able to engage everyone involved in the project to create a greater level of collaboration and understanding. 

 

The jury for the AIA TAP Innovation Awards include:
• Steven Wolf, AIA (Chair), Target Corporation
• Dr. Carrie Sturts Dossick, P.E., University of Washington
• Federico Negro, CASE
• Shane Burger, Woods Bagot
• Randall Deutsch, AIA, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Related Stories

| Nov 25, 2013

Electronic plan review: Coming soon to a city near you?

With all the effort AEC professionals put into leveraging technology to communicate digitally on projects, it is a shame that there is often one major road block that becomes the paper in their otherwise “paperless” project: the local city planning and permitting department. 

| Nov 22, 2013

Kieran Timberlake, PE International develop BIM tool for green building life cycle assessment

Kieran Timberlake and PE International have developed Tally, an analysis tool to help BIM users keep better score of their projects’ complete environmental footprints.

| Nov 8, 2013

Can Big Data help building owners slash op-ex budgets?

Real estate services giant Jones Lang LaSalle set out to answer these questions when it partnered with Pacific Controls to develop  IntelliCommand, a 24/7 real-time remote monitoring and control service for its commercial real estate owner clients. 

| Oct 30, 2013

Why are companies forcing people back to the office?

For a while now companies have been advised that flexibility is a key component to a successful workplace strategy, with remote working being a big consideration. But some argue that we’ve moved the needle too far toward a “work anywhere” culture. 

| Oct 30, 2013

11 hot BIM/VDC topics for 2013

If you like to geek out on building information modeling and virtual design and construction, you should enjoy this overview of the top BIM/VDC topics.

| Oct 18, 2013

Meet the winners of BD+C's $5,000 Vision U40 Competition

Fifteen teams competed last week in the first annual Vision U40 Competition at BD+C's Under 40 Leadership Summit in San Francisco. Here are the five winning teams, including the $3,000 grand prize honorees.

| Oct 18, 2013

A picture’s worth a thousand words… if you can find it

Photographs are becoming more essential to project communication and documentation. Recently, I sat in a local airport integration project meeting in which the owner outlined their expectation for construction documentation. One of the first requirements was to provide photographs throughout the building process.

Sponsored | | Oct 7, 2013

Bridging the digital divide between the BIM haves and have nots

There's no doubt that BIM is the future of design. But for many firms, finding a bridge to access rich model data and share it with those typically left on the sidelines can be the difference between winning a bid or not. 

| Oct 2, 2013

Corporate HQ in 10 months made possible with BIM coordination

An integrated Building Team uses BIM/VDC to convert a 1940s-era industrial building into a flashy new headquarters for Hillshire Brands in a matter of months. 

| Sep 26, 2013

Mobilizing your job site to achieve a paperless project: fact or fiction?

True mobility in the field has rapidly evolved from lock-box kiosks on each floor to laptops on rolling carts to tablets and iPads loaded with drawings sets stored in the cloud. And WiFi-ready job sites have gone from “nice to have” to “must have” status in just a little over a year.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category



AEC Tech

Lack of organizational readiness is biggest hurdle to artificial intelligence adoption

Managers of companies in the industrial sector, including construction, have bought the hype of artificial intelligence (AI) as a transformative technology, but their organizations are not ready to realize its promise, according to research from IFS, a global cloud enterprise software company. An IFS survey of 1,700 senior decision-makers found that 84% of executives anticipate massive organizational benefits from AI. 


halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021