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If you get a group of experienced CAD journalists,
vendors, analysts and users in a room they will say that the construction
industry would be a better place if a 3D building model was to communicate
design between all the stakeholders. However, most design communication
in the construction industry today is by 2D drawing or by document.
This suggests a serious gulf between best practice and common practice.
What's going on?
The most common explanation is simply the fragmented
structure of the construction industry. Creating the 3D building
model in the first place will cost the designer more, and the return
on that investment will accrue downstream, to the building user,
the building owner, the contractor etc. That's the system and we
can't do anything about it.
I don't think that is good enough. If we do think
a building model will create more value, then market mechanisms
should distribute that value up the chain to the building model
creator. Those of us who work with the construction industry have
got to "try harder".
Last October, in Nice, a group of partners and
directors from the European construction industry joined a summit
meeting sponsored by Bentley systems. Among the presentations
and networking meetings were a set of breakout sessions where small
groups did "try harder". They identified the barriers
to adoption and some action lines that could be a first step to
overcoming the model free culture. I attended these sessions and
this article draws on those discussions. However, I take full responsibility
for the assertions and opinions in this article.
Our cast of players took as read the benefits
of using a building model:
Better
quality of decisions when the stakeholders are reviewing a model,
as the representation of the project leads to lower lifecycle costs.
This in turn creates value for the client as a developer, and their
client as an occupier.
Greater
certainty as to the costs of the project at an earlier stage that
allows developers to proceed faster, and with lower risk premiums
on the projected return on investment.
Design
and construction companies want to be known for signature buildings.
When they use a model they can express more complex ideas without
increasing the risks of construction mistakes and cost overruns.
Staff
aspire to create great buildings. When they are working to co-ordinate
and record design decisions in a model they are doing what they
are best at. Few staff aspire to working on co-ordinating revisions
across tens of working drawings. Empowerment creates better motivated,
more effective employees, who add more value for their employer.
It's more fun as well as good business sense.
Most enterprises in our economy use buildings.
Property, along with raw materials and labour, is one of the top
three ledger cost lines. If management is serious about improving
profits for their shareholders, an obvious action is managing property
costs as aggressively as procurement of materials and negotiation
over wages.
Because the construction industry value chain
is so complex, it is difficult for managers to know if they are
overpaying. They often do. Most towns have a building that only
gets sold on, or let, at the height of a boom. On examination that's
because something went wrong in the construction phase. The only
time the owner or leaseholder can recover their cost is to move
on when prices are on a roll. Building occupiers don't have visibility
or metrics that let them know if they are overpaying because of
incompetence at the building stage. At present, decisions are made
on subjective rather than objective measures.
Making this economic benefit more transparent
would enable industry to justify building more detailed models at
an earlier stage. Manufacturing industry has proved that practice
leads to lower costs and extra value. Construction is going to follow
suit, it's just a question of when.
The analogy that comes to mind is that of a parent
getting a small child to sleep when he wants to stay up. As the
child gets more and more tired, his behaviour gets more and more
irrational. But sleep is inevitable. The parent has to be consistent
and patient! A skilled parent can overcome barriers to sleep and
accelerate the time when peace will reign.
At the summit, our groups brainstormed barriers
to the acceptance of models. These started with the client's low
expectations. When the client is a developer who will sell the project
on to a pension fund as soon as it is let, this is understandable.
However, the owner/operator market and property companies have a
business model where reduction in the building's construction and
running costs flows straight to the bottom line. These clients'
expectations can most easily be raised, and satisfied.
Perhaps the biggest barrier, though, is the work
culture in firms in the construction value chain. As Mark Twain
said, "I'm all in favour of progress, it's change I hate".
Change costs money. A project focused culture leads to short termism.
The day to day time pressures mean that it's difficult for the various
parties in the chain to find the time and resource to change working
practices. There are still problems with inter-operability between
CAD and related systems that cause a great deal human interaction
to interpret and re-input data. Set up costs to create a solution
are too high and standard component libraries too hard to find and
use. Particularly in contractors, staff are used to drawings and
not used to models. They will need training to change their working
practices and to gain benefits in efficiency.
Finally, there is the barrier of the way fees
and costs are distributed up and down the chain. This has to be
adjusted for the change to take effect. However, our group thought
that the pressure on scale fee structures was already enough to
force change. We feel that, after a period of pain for the less
efficient, this barrier would go away of its own accord. Interestingly,
one construction company director present said his company had an
established measure for quality of the information received from
each architect/engineering firm. When they bid to clients for projects
designed by those architects and engineers, the bid contained a
premium related to the metric. The cost of poor quality design was
already being passed on.
Having reached a consensus on these barriers the
groups brainstormed action plans. Overall the conclusion was that
the key is to identify who has the power to trigger change, and
then providing education to facilitate that change.
Our analysis is that the key trigger is building
developers wanting better profits. They can be educated to ask their
suppliers, the architects, for more accurate information on the
costs that the building will consume in occupation. They can then
use this information in lease negotiations.
Possible allies are the Enterprise Application
software vendors like JD Edwards and SAP. They are hungry to expand
their clients' financial efficiency. Today, they simply provide
financial information to management. In future, they want to show
companies how what-if scenario planning could improve decision making.
Property costs could be an important factor. Could these vendors,
who do have the ear of the CFO, be part of the solution? Certainly,
it is facility management practices in large management consultancies
that have produced most of the studies to date. Management education
doesn't come cheaply from that direction.
Not every developer nor architect will change.
Owner occupiers who commission buildings have the most obvious economic
interest in cheaper buildings across the lifecycle. We need computer
literate managers at all stages of the building lifecycle from design
through construction to occupation. Probably it is the younger architectural
and engineering practices who are more ready to change.
The classic take off point for a brash new practice
is to win a competition with a sensational building that complies
with the brief's constraints. After that success, they will need
to work hard to differentiate themselves. The ability to sell the
lower lifecycle cost from occupying their buildings could be one
angle. Maybe one trick is a bit of sales training for architects.
We do need case studies that can be widely publicised.
Can anyone provide me with examples where the building owner did
in fact demand a building model from his contractor and design team?
Does any occupier get the building model, so that a second user
can plan and visualise their layout, using information generated
during the original design of the space?
The Bentley International Building Summit provided
an opportunity to think longer term. The insights from networking
were really valuable and we're all now in a better position to translate
some of our ideas into actions. We'll be talking to our construction
industry contacts over the next few months to find a few pioneers.
Mike
Evans
mike.evans@cambashi.com
A version of this article was first published in the February 2003
issue of AEC Automation.
Other Cambashi articles that may be of interest:
Is
PLM applicable to AEC?
A-E-C
Systems 2002 review
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