BIM - What Is
BIM - What Is
BIM - What Is
A subset of this taxonomy is used in an influential set of requirements for building project
contractors, the US General Service Administration (owner of over 300 million square feet of
rentable space). It demanded in 2006 that all major building design projects submit a spatial program
BIM, whose requirements are described in a 2007 BIM Guide Series document.
BIM Spatial Models required by the GSA are based in geometric definitions. They note: Spaces are
one of the most important object types in conceptual building design. During pre-design, many, if not
most, client requirements are described in terms of spatial program requirements; furthermore,
throughout building design and operation many performance metrics utilize spatial data.
Consequently, modeling spaces accurately is one of the most important tasks in creating BIMs.
Requirements of any spatial model include:
When spaces are defined by its surrounding walls, the area inside them is defined precisely. In
a BIM process, the space itself is a 3-D object...typically created by aligning its geometry with
the inside faces of surrounding building elements (e.g., walls, floors, ceilings, etc.). If the
geometry of these building elements changes, the space object must also be updated to reflect
the new geometry of the space.
Some physically bound volumes may have several functional spaces inside them...spaces
should be represented and broken down into functional spaces (i.e., office area, storage area,
building common area, vertical penetration, etc.) even though they may be parts of a larger
physical space.
A physical space may contain several areas that are treated individually in the GSA spatial
program. If two areas have different functional space classifications, even though they are
within the same physical space, they shall be modeled as two separate spaces. For example,
there may be a security checkpoint area within a lobby. In this case, the security checkpoint
area (Office) and the remainder of the lobby area (Building Common) must be modeled as
separate non-overlapping spaces. These spaces might also be grouped into a Zone, for
visualization and analysis purposes (e.g., to differentiate private vs. public zones, for thermal
simulation calculations).
There are also some interesting rules associated with GSA spaces, for example: for areas under 9 s.f.
that do not have a defined space object, the BIM-analysis rules will treat this area as if it were a
wall.
Building Information Model (BIM the data model) had its origins in Chuck Eastman's Building
Product Model. His discussion on What is BIM? stresses that BIM involves representing a design as
objects - generic or product-specific, solid shapes or void-space oriented (like the shape of a room),
that carry their geometry and attributes. If an object is changed or moved, it need only be acted on
once...Parametric objects automatically re-build themselves according to the rules embedded in them.
The rules may be simple, requiring a window to be wholly within a wall, or complex defining size
ranges, and detailing. Eastman is currently the director of the Architecture, Engineering, and
Construction (AEC) Integration Lab.
Taxonomy of BIM terms (subset) (http://bim.arch.gatech.edu/content_view.asp?id=454):
Object(s)
Objects are the internal representation of real world items or concepts in the
discourse of the application domain. In BIM, objects could be recognized as
building elements for instance a piece of geometry, a solid primitive, a beam, a
column, a window, a staircase, etc. An object can also be assembled and represented
by multiple objects. At the implementation level, an object usually can be
instantiated through a class that constructs the particular object.
User
Definable
Object
User definable objects is where users can build an object from scratch and have full
control on the design of an object in terms of 1) the geometric representation; 2)
properties; 3) constraints and variables for its parametric behavior...
Parameter
Geometric
Parameter
One type of parameter especially used to define the intrinsic properties of geometry,
for example, coordinate, surface parameters, and angle. Also measurements of a
shape: distance, area, volume, and centroid.
Geometric
constraints
Parametric
behavior
Parametric
shape
Parametric
curved
surfaces
Parametric
solid
CAD-GIS-BIM Integration
An example of a CAD-design that can be saved as a 3D-PDF and imported in Google Maps.
The above example is from: OGC Workgroup: BIM Data Exchangability with GML
More interesting BIM examples came out of the June 2008 Build London Live event in which 10
teams from 5 different continents were given 48 hours to design a part of London from scratch in a
huge online collaborative effort that used BIM methodology and tools. The winning team of the June
2008 Build London Live event created a highly detailed IFC model for their BIM.
See also:
ERSI support for CGB
OGC Workgroup 2007 talks on Geospatial Web Services for Infrastructure and Buildings