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AGC Unveils
New Building Information Modeling Guide
10/9/2006
By
Judy Schriener and Robert Carlsen

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| Contractors
peruse BIM guide at AGC conference. (Photo: Judy Schriener/ENR
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Building information modeling is sweeping
through the industry and a
new guide for contractors from the Associated General Contractors
of America is designed to help them keep up.
BIM is a design software tool that simulates
construction and allows collaboration among the owner, architect,
engineers, consultants, contractors and specialty contractors. The
tool contributes to faster project delivery, enhanced economics
and lean construction, according to the guide, unveiled at AGCs
midyear meeting Sept. 29-30 in San Francisco.
More than 150 contractors snatched up copies
at the release session. Weve had a tremendous interest
from members, says co-author David Hanson, senior vice president
in the Tampa office of Walbridge Aldinger Co.
Hanson and 23 other AGC members authored the
BIM guide, which is free to AGC members. It includes sections on
risk management, software and hardware options and training. The
guide also outlines contractor benefits, including the ability to
identify design conflicts, errors and omissions prior to construction;
higher reliability of expected field conditions; the ability to
do what if scenarios; and fewer callbacks and lower
warranty costs. Vendors contributed to a chart comparing various
tools in the appendix. BIM is going to change a lot of responsibility
matrixes, says AGC President Harry Mashburn, president of
Mashburn Construction Co., Columbia, S.C.
Contractors are interested in BIM, but someone
has to convince the project participants to use it and, ultimately,
the owner to pay for it, none of which are easily accomplished,
says William A. Cobb Jr., president of Haverstick-Borthwick So.,
Plymouth Meeting, Pa., and chair of AGCs Electronic Information
Systems committee. While hes optimistic about the future of
BIM and has been pushing for its adoption, he says, Right
now its obstacle, obstacle, obstacle.
Another challenge for contractors that want
to use BIM is risk management. Another of the guides co-authors,
J. William Ernstrom, general counsel and senior vice president of
Alberici Group Inc., St. Louis, Mo., warned contractors in the BIM
session at the conference, Right now the lawyers have no idea
to how handle this, referring to the risk and levels of responsibility
that may be unclear when using BIM. He also anticipates bonding
companies asking contractors, How are you planning to handle
the risk?
Other questions about BIM that AGC contractors
discussed needing answers to include: Is it okay to turn a designers
2D drawing into a 3D figure without the designers permission?
Who owns the model? Who maintains it and is responsible if anything
goes wrong?
As BIM is more widely used, the guides
authors point out the advantages of starting to use BIM now. You
can look at five different ways to sequence a job before you do
it, says Hanson. I see conflict of collision detection
of the greatest benefit to us as contractors, adds Michael
E. Kenig, vice chairman of Holder Construction Co., Atlanta, another
co-author of the guide. He believes that adoption will come slowly,
with contractors using it to visualize a couple of trades but not
all of them on a single project, or for envisioning the mechanical
piping or the structure or fire protection, one or two at a time
before tackling an entire project.
One primary reason to adopt BIM early on is
for marketing. For one thing, a contractor using BIM differentiates
itself from competitors, at least for now, says Hanson. Also, it
enables clients and the public to see what a project
will look like when finished. Making the model intelligent
by embedding detailed information into various parts will come later
in the adoption process.
Kenig says, Visualization, as they say,
is the low-hanging fruit. But its a big piece of fruit.
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