BIM

Can you afford to not require building models?

Many of the best builders use ephemeral models today. Contractors generate their own building models. They create these models are created prior to the bid, to address the inadequacies planning using he traditional building system drawings. When he wins the project, the contractor will use this model throughout the construction process. This model is then discarded, as it is not specified as part of the project deliverables, and could create additional liability. It would be far better, and far more efficient, is these models were based upon the designer’s models, and were included as project deliverables at building turn-over.

Without a design process that actually includes the mechanical systems and their controls, there is no underlying operational model for the building. Without an underlying model, ongoing system maintenance is based upon guesses. Without live performance metrics, including instant access to energy metering, linked to that model, than building system operations are based upon experience and guesswork. When the system is green and non-traditional, you can eliminate experience, leaving only guesswork to operate the building, and to tell if the building is being tuned into or falling out of control.

The solution to these problems is an integrated data model for the building whose life extends as long as the life of the building. The data model starts with the capture of the design intents. Building designs should be models, not drawings, and should be standards-based. The energy model, for example, should run directly off the building model and could be compared to the design goals. Changes to the design, especially during value engineering when many innovative features are eliminated, could be automatically reflected in updated energy models.

This building model should be available electronically to each bidder and used throughout the construction process. The increased accuracy of the bid package and reduction in change orders during construction would reduce costs and result in as-built models that match the initial design. These accurate designs, would include full identification of the internal systems, their components, and their performance expectations.

With delivery of the as-built models, using system identifications consistent with the initial design documents, then building commissioning becomes validation of performance to the design. In the case of energy systems, commissioning becomes validation to and alignment with the energy model. This, at last, becomes a significant improvement over the traditional standard, described only half in humour, as “no sparks”.

This persistent design model would become the basis of maintenance and operations decisions. Maintenance staff would have ready access to design and commissioning documents keyed with the same systems identifications. Field notes and best practices discovered for one system could be made automatically available to all similar systems using the information model. acts necessary to support innovative systems would be available to maintenance and operations throughout the life of the building.

What Good is LEED Certification?

It’s time to acknowledge that LEED standards, as they exist today, increase cost without increasing value. Without committing to fundamental reform of the building development process, Green points from LEED have little if any effect on the overall project. LEED gives points producing the symptoms of a good development process. Most designers, and most owners, opt to produce the symptoms, and leave the flawed processes intact.

The Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Green Building Rating System is the accepted benchmark for the design, construction, and operation of high performance green buildings. LEED promotes a whole-building approach to sustainability by recognizing performance in five key areas of human and environmental health: sustainable site development, water savings, energy efficiency, materials selection, and indoor environmental quality. A project is a viable candidate for LEED certification if it can meet all prerequisites and achieve the minimum number of points to earn the Certified level of LEED project certification. Projects are awarded Certified, Silver, Gold, or Platinum certification.

Unfortunately, LEED can reward those with existing bad processes more than it can acknowledge existing good ones. If you made bad decisions in the past, you get extra points for not making them again. It is too easy to greenwash a project by adding an energy modeling component that has no intrinsic tie to the construction documents. The routinely incomplete documentation of building systems means that the actual wiring and operations is dependent upon the creativity of the subcontractor rather than the Green design. With incomplete system documents, commissioning is a demanding but ultimately futile function. Innovations in system design are lost in normal maintenance and operations due to the inaccessibility or incompleteness of the documents handed over.

To achieve the results LEED aims for requires not just gaming symptoms, but rather an actual commitment to good processes, for the planning, design, construction, and operation of capital assets. The foundation for these good processes must be a non-transient base of information that is accessible throughout the entire building life-cycle. All process audit functions, whether energy modeling, code compliance checking, or even commissioning must be based directly on that information base. If we used such a process, most of the LEED points would fall automatically from the process, with little extra effort necessary.

When we score LEED points without examining the underlying process, we are summing nonsense. Here are some specifics:

  • At UNC, buildable lots are identified and cleared five to ten years before construction starts. Every clear lot is, as on most campuses, used as a parking lot. Today, we get green points because under LEED, siting buildings on brown fields, such as parking lots, is a best practice.
  • We specify, for reasons that are primarily historical and regulatory, CAD-based designs. To get green points, we require that the designer acquire an energy model. That model has no intrinsic link to the CAD design, and there is no way to determine if value engineering removes the features modeled.
  • Building systems are drafted as crude schematics, with no provable links to actual wiring and control tags. This creates building monitoring systems that cannot be linked back to the design, nor to the energy model. This makes commissioning more arduous and less effective.
  • Practitioners in retro-commissioning, that is the process of re-visiting a building possibly years after initial construction and examining system operations are unanimous; nothing would be worse that returning the building to its initial design state. Even in new buildings with high LEED ratings, the control systems were only partially designed at best.

Without a design process that actually includes the mechanical systems and their controls, there is no underlying operational model for the building. Without an underlying model, ongoing system maintenance is based upon guesses. Without live performance metrics, including instant access to energy metering, linked to that model, than building system operations are based upon experience and guesswork. When the system is green and non-traditional, you can eliminate experience, leaving only guesswork. to operate the building, and to tell if the building is being tuned into or falling out of control.

The solution to these problems is an integrated data model for the building whose life extends as long as the life of the building. The data model starts with the capture of the design intents. Building designs should be models, not drawings, and should be standards-based. The energy model would then run directly off the building model and could be compared to the design goals. Changes to the design, especially during value engineering when many innovative features are eliminated, could be automatically reflected in updated energy models.

The electronic building model should be available electronically to each bidder and used throughout the construction process. The increased accuracy of the bid package and reduction in change orders during construction would reduce costs and result in as-built models that match the initial design. These accurate designs, delivered to the owner, would include full identification of the internal systems, their components, and their performance expectations.

With delivery of the as-built models, using system identifications consistent with the initial design documents, building commissioning becomes validation of performance to the design. In the case of energy systems, commissioning becomes validation to and alignment with the energy model. This, at last, becomes a significant improvement over the traditional standard, described, only half in jest, as “no sparks”.

Under this business model, LEED credit would become relevant. Each LEED point is no longer a game-able item separate from the actual business process, but an intrinsic metric of the quality of the process. Facts necessary to support innovative systems would be available to maintenance and operations throughout the life of the building. Those would be green points worth earning.

Note: I know of and am watching eagerly the development of ASHRAE standard G189P. I think the observations here are aligned with its intent, It will offer some improved structure that will lead to measurable sustainable performance.

Let's Make Energy Models Relevant

Energy modeling is an important part of designing more performant and healthful buildings. Energy modeling is a foundational requirement of important initiatives such as the Zero Energy Building Initiative (link) or the Zero Net Carbon Building project (link). Building Energy Modeling is also an important tool to determine problems in building design before the more expensive construction process begins. Today, because of lack of integration and a reluctance to re-think the design-build process, Energy Modeling is often an ineffective sop to public constituencies, adding cost but little value to a project. This is particularly true for construction projects performed by government agencies, with their commitment to traditional processes and metrics that are often in conflict with innovation and new business processes.

New building projects have two sources of design constraints: organizational goals and design intents. Organizational goals are larger than any single project, and stem often from public pronouncements. All new buildings will be at least LEED Silver. Each new office building will have an energy budget 20% below that of our existing portfolio when it comes on line. Design intents are transcribed for each building, often during marathon charrettes with lots of soggy deli take-out. Together they describe the success points against which the design should be evaluated.

Many of today’s energy models are generated in response to organizational intents. Energy models are a source of green points, and they may have some tangential applicability to the construction documents. They are rarely an intrinsic part of the design process. They are often a sub-contract let by the design firm.

It is more useful to think of Energy Modeling as an audit or commissioning process applied to the design. Just as we wish to commission a building before we accept occupancy, we should commission the design before we bring it to bid. Just as we commission a building to see if it works as designed, we should commission the design to see if it has met the organizational goals and design intents. The energy model is one part of commissioning the design, and as an audit, it may be best be performed by a third party working for the owner rather than the designer.

Often the sole real liability for the designer pre-construction is meeting the bidding budget. If this constraint is not met, we return to the designer for the misnamed “value engineering”. A better process, based upon a persistent building model, would re-subject all value engineered designs to energy modeling as well as the other design validation processes currently being developed [1] . These models would then present explicitly to the owner the compromises to design intent and organizational goals that derive from the value engineering process.

This increased liability on the designer will not come without cost. Increased liability demands increased payment for increased value. This increased cost will be easy to recapture. Errors are always easiest and cheapest to fix earlier in any process.



[1] See efforts by the International Codes Council (ICC) to automate compliance checking, beginning with automated Energy Code Compliance checking, with Electrical Code, Plumbing Code and other compliances in the plans.

Tardif on BIM

Michael Tardif has been writing a seies of articles for the AIA magazine on moving toward using Building Information Moddelling (BIM) in the practice of architecture. While NBIMS is more than BIM, BIM is a very important part of NBIMS. Michaels work explains to architects why they should move to BIM. If architects move to BIM, we can leverage NBIMS to create, for example, design-based energy models that are intrinsically lined to the design, expressed as BIM. If the building is bult to the BIM, we should be able to commission the builsding to the original energy model.

And so on.

His most recent article describes the work work that OLBN Architectural Services, Inc. has completed for the GSA in support of a Program Development Study for the a former hospital campus in Washington, D.C. that is slated to become the future home of a U.S. cabinet department.

Leveraging BIMformation

http://www.aia.org/aiarchitect/thisweek07/0518/0518rc_face.cfm

Below are his previous articles in the series. If you are new to BIM, and do not understand the buzz, I recommend reading them all.

October 27, 2006

Faith-based BIM

http://www.aia.org/aiarchitect/thisweek06/1027/1027rc_pract.cfm

December 1, 2006

BIM Me Up, Scotty

http://www.aia.org/aiarchitect/thisweek06/1201/1201rc_face.cfm

January 5, 2007

BIM 2011: A Five-Year Forecast

http://www.aia.org/aiarchitect/thisweek07/0105/0105rc_face.cfm

February 2, 2007

Fox Architects Takes the Plunge

http://www.aia.org/aiarchitect/thisweek07/0202/0202rc_face.cfm

March 3, 2007

One Hundred Percent BIM

http://www.aia.org/aiarchitect/thisweek07/0309/0309rc_face.cfm

April 6, 2007

Converging Technologies

http://www.aia.org/aiarchitect/thisweek07/0406/0406rc_face.cfm

 

Toby says "Check it out !"

Definitely worth a look