flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Great Solutions: BIM/Information Technology

Great Solutions: BIM/Information Technology


By By Robert Cassidy, Editor-in-Chief; Jay W. Schneider, Senior Editor; Dave Barista, Managing Editor; and Jeff Yoders, Senior Associate Editor | August 11, 2010
This article first appeared in the 200908 issue of BD+C.

HKS used its ARCHengine virtual environment to allow season ticket holders to see different views and angles of the $1 billion Cowboys stadium project.


4. Architectural Visualization through Gaming Technology

Before 3D walkthroughs for client presentations were popular, HKS manager of Advanced Technologies Pat Carmichael and his team were working to marry gaming engines with 3D building models. "What's being tasked to us more and more is not just to show design, but to show function," Carmichael said. HKS's in-house-developed ARCHengine allows realistic architectural visualization in an interactive virtual environment. It includes the ability to show real-time shadows and light, moving figures, operational mechanical equipment, and animations that run at 30 frames per second. Utilizing the polygonal structure of Epic Games' Unreal Engine 3, ARCHengine delivers textured details and immersive graphic environments that can show how a building will work to clients and potential buyers. For the new $1 billion Dallas Cowboys Stadium,

ARCHengine was able to show different views

from

different seats and allow potential season ticket holders to walk, or fly, through the stadium. Now, other visualization programs are following Carmichael's lead and using gaming engines to show architectural design.

5. Free Online Design Tool for Energy Estimating and Evaluation

To help its 1,500-plus architects design energy-efficient buildings toward meeting AIA's 2030 Challenge, Perkins+Will in April launched an online energy estimating and evaluation tool for new construction and retrofit projects. The firm made the tool available to the public for free at http://2030e2.perkinswill.com.

The 2030 e2 Energy Estimating Tool allows users to set targets in four key areas—energy efficiency, on-site renewable energy, grid-supplied renewable energy, and green power offsets—and assess a building's design against the goals of the 2030 Challenge, which calls for an immediate 50% reduction in carbon emissions of buildings and carbon neutrality by 2030.

Plug in the project name, location, and start date, as well as key energy-related information such as regional fuel mix and baseline energy use for the area, and the tool automatically tracks progress toward 2030.

"The 2030 e2 Energy Estimating Tool allows designers to explore different percentages of these elements to achieve the 2030 goals," says Doug Pierce, AIA, LEED, senior associate in Perkins+Will's Minneapolis office and developer of the tool. "Additionally, the tool can be used over and over to confirm 2030 compliance throughout the life of the projec

t."

This model, seen on the Web in the ICEvision viewer, allows full examination of the architect’s Revit model. The client used the viewer to “fly” up to his office window to see what his sightline would be like during a game.


6. Easy AutoCAD and Revit File Sharing

ICEvision from Salt Lake City-based Ice Edge enables users to explore Revit or AutoCAD 3D models in a dynamically rendered 3D viewer on a computer, smartphone, or other mobile device. The ICEvision viewer is a full exploratory environment of a 3D model that lets you walk through and visualize an entire project in detail rendered directly from AutoCAD or Revit. Publishers can also associate bookmarks and annotations of their models to give guided tours to end users. ICEvision is platform neutral. The ICEvision viewer for Web and e-mail sharing is available as a free download. ICEvision's iPhone plug-in helps you check models for accuracy directly from your jobsit

e.

An example of how BIM virtual mockups work: The fi rst fi gure shows a point on a roof where a radius needed to intersect with a tangent. However, the meeting point left no room for construction workers to caulk or fl ash the joint.
The virtual mockup in the second figure shows how JE Dunn and its architect modeled a solution during the design stage that would permit worker access
to the point of contention, thus saving a costly change order during construction.


7. BIM Virtual Mockups Found to be Less Expensive than Physical Mockups

JE Dunn Construction uses building information modeling extensively on its projects, but the company (ranked #102 with 62 seats of BIM software on

BD+C's Giants BIM adoption list

) is also using 3D models for constructability analysis, including field conditions. All information (even 2D CAD) that JE Dunn receives from their architects on big projects is put into a 3D model. From there, virtual mockups are created to make sure construction conditions, such as room for a ladder and a worker to flash or caulk a joint, are checked out and confirmed to be buildable (see example below

).

With Double-Take data backup, Gould Evans’s main server is in constant contact with an SRO image server. Double-Take replicates and compresses the
backup data to take up less space.


8. Backup Software Saves Data, Money at Gould Evans

Gould Evans needed to trim the cost of its tape-only data storage and backup system. IT manager Chet LaBruyere wanted to improve the accessibility of the system to all 150 Gould Evans employees in the firm's five offices—Kansas City, Mo., Lawrence, Kan., Phoenix, Tampa, and San Francisco—and reduce the risk of data loss between them. After testing several systems, LaBruyere decided to go with Riverbed WAN technology and data replication software from Double-Take. This solution enabled Gould Evans to store all of its backed-up data on one SRO image server accessible to all offices. Double-Take's replication software is hardware agnostic, so it can back up work from Mac, LINUX, or Windows computers. The new system reduces backup labor from 36 human-hours a week to one or two human-hours a week and saves $55,250 a year, plus another $8,400 in annual savings in tape media. Double-Take's system has reduced the total amount of data on Gould Evans's servers by 52% while more than doubling their WAN's bandwidth capacity.

Related Stories

| Aug 4, 2014

Facebook’s prefab data center concept aims to slash construction time in half

Less than a year after opening its ultra-green, hydropowered data center facility in Luleå, Sweden, Facebook is back at it in Mother Svea with yet another novel approach to data center design.

| Jul 30, 2014

German students design rooftop solar panels that double as housing

Students at the Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences designed a solar panel that can double as living space for the Solar Decathlon Europe.

| Jul 17, 2014

A harmful trade-off many U.S. green buildings make

The Urban Green Council addresses a concern that many "green" buildings in the U.S. have: poor insulation.

| Jul 17, 2014

A high-rise with outdoor, vertical community space? It's possible! [slideshow]

Danish design firm C.F. Møller has developed a novel way to increase community space without compromising privacy or indoor space.

| Jul 11, 2014

Are these LEGO-like blocks the future of construction?

Kite Bricks proposes a more efficient way of building with its newly developed Smart Bricks system.

| Jun 20, 2014

U.S. Energy Information Administration releases preliminary Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey results

Federal survey project shows that commercial-building floorspace has grown 22% since 2003; energy-use data will be released in Spring 2015.

| May 22, 2014

Facebook, Telus push the limits of energy efficiency with new data centers

Building Teams are employing a range of creative solutions—from evaporative cooling to novel hot/cold-aisle configurations to heat recovery schemes—in an effort to slash energy and water demand.

| May 22, 2014

Big Data meets data centers – What the coming DCIM boom means to owners and Building Teams

The demand for sophisticated facility monitoring solutions has spurred a new market segment—data center infrastructure management (DCIM)—that is likely to impact the way data center projects are planned, designed, built, and operated. 

| May 20, 2014

Kinetic Architecture: New book explores innovations in active façades

The book, co-authored by Arup's Russell Fortmeyer, illustrates the various ways architects, consultants, and engineers approach energy and comfort by manipulating air, water, and light through the layers of passive and active building envelope systems.

| May 16, 2014

BoA, USGBC to offer $25,000 grants for green affordable housing projects

The Affordable Green Neighborhoods Grant Program will offer 14 grants to developers of affordable housing in North America who are committed to building sustainable communities through the LEED for Neighborhood Development program. 

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




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