BIM - Building Information Modeling

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BIM - Building Information Modeling

A place to discuss all things related to the Building Information Model. Not about a specific software.

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BIM- A closer look 9 Replies

Started by Scott Ebert. Last reply by Miguel K. Jan 25, 2011.

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Comment by Scott Ebert on January 22, 2011 at 8:24pm

In addition to GSA, the US Army Corps of Engineers will be developing real BIM projects through the use of the Autodesk Revit Platform. Anyone else know of other government entities requiring real BIM on their projects. Please all pretty picture BIM projects or organizations need not apply...

Comment by oz on June 29, 2009 at 8:44pm
Comment by oz on June 29, 2009 at 8:30pm
Bringing BIM to Public Buildings
The GSA streamlined its design and construction process by encouraging the use of 3D, 4D, and BIM. Now Uncle Sam's landlord is mandating BIM in all its capital projects, and many in the AEC industry are marching in step.


http://www.bdcnetwork.com/article/CA6621134.html
Comment by oz on June 29, 2009 at 8:26pm
whosafraidofthebigbadbim.blogspot.com/

Who's afraid of the Big Bad BIM?
Comment by Don Rataj on June 8, 2009 at 4:14pm
RKAI is jumping in on BIM.
Comment by oz on November 21, 2008 at 12:28am
Heat Loss is somewhat unusual in the building sciences because the math appears simple. In fact, we choose simple math because it gives accurate estimates with minimal work. A house experiences heat loss in three ways: conduction, radiation, and infiltration. We do three separate calculations and sum them to arrive at the overall heat loss for the house. Today, I will discuss only the formula for conduction. For the other two, I highly recommend taking the class.

Perhaps the easiest form of heat loss to define and control is conduction. Conduction is minimized by insulation, or high R-value walls. R is for Resistance to heat loss. The simple formula for heat loss due to conduction is:

Hmax= (1/R-value) x A x ΔT

where Hmax is the maximum possible flow of heat in BTU/hr for the house
1/R-value is conductance expressed in BTU/Hour*s.f.*°F
A is the surface area of the house in square feet
and ΔT is the change in temperature across the wall in °F

Don't get scared off by the math! This is easy and it actually sheds light on how to build the house. One BTU (British Thermal Unit) is the amount of heat energy that raises the temperature of one pound of water by one degree farenheit. The first problem we solve in class is: how many BTU's are required to make a cup of tea? (hint: a pint is a pound the world around)

The beauty of the conductive heat loss formula is that it tells us immediately that heat loss depends on 3 factors: 1/R-value is the amount of insulation, A is the surface area of the structure, and ΔT is the change in temperature across the building envelope. More insulation (higher R-value) means less heat loss. Bigger houses (with bigger surface Areas) will require more energy to heat. And, of course, it makes sense that the colder it is outside (the greater the ΔT), the more heat we will need inside to keep warm. The formula allows us to put numbers to our intuitive grasp of heat loss and begin to make decisions about our house.

It only takes about 15 minutes to calculate the conductive heat loss for a house by choosing an R-value from the insulation label, adding up the square footages of walls and roof, and looking up the 30-year minimum average daily temperature for the coldest day of the year. What makes this class fun, and what we spend time on in class, is building an intuitive knowledge of heat loss that enables us to design truly energy efficient, comfortable homes.
Comment by Vinay Jain on September 6, 2008 at 6:49am
Recently i have heard about building energy simulation, but these tools are not easily available and even there is no one to guide here particularly in india, if anybody have information about this please help me out. I have also learnt revit architecture and morever how BIM can help in building simulation?
Thank You
Comment by Scott Ebert on June 21, 2008 at 6:18pm
Anyone interested in learning more about BIM, please feel free to ask questions. I advise firms in all AEC/O disciplines around the world and would be happy to help all understand the implications of this new paradigm.
 

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