scholarly journals BIM Technology and Changes in Traditional Design Process, Reliability of Data from Related Registers

Author(s):  
Kristýna Prušková
Author(s):  
Mohammed Waheed ◽  
◽  
Mahmad Naheed ◽  
Parvez Patel ◽  
Syed Mubashir Hussain ◽  
...  

In this works 3D modeling, design and safety management of high rise building using building information modeling (BIM) technology is carried out.. Initially a AutoCAD plan with all its salient features is developed following byelaws of high rise building. Then the 3D modeling and rendering of high rise building is done in the Revit architecture of the 2D plan which is imported from the AutoCAD. The analysis and design of high rise building is carried out using ETabs software. Apart from the structural design Mechanical, Electrical and Plumbing (MEP) services design is carried out using BIM technology . The layout of fire safety system is specified efficiently with use of BIM in co-ordination with MEP services. The application of BIM based design process resulted in considerable time reduction in compression with traditional design process and the holistic design of the high rise building is carried out with the compatibility of different softwares.


2014 ◽  
Vol 584-586 ◽  
pp. 19-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Long Zhang ◽  
Yu Bo Gao ◽  
Yu Bo Gao ◽  
Yu Bo Gao

With development of nonlinear construction theory and digital technology, parameterization construction design has drawn extensive attention in construction industry as a new method of solving complex problems in construction. Parameterization design method has broken through the qualitative and transcendental design methods for design issues in the traditional design process. After getting rid of the form constraint of Euclidean geometry, generation of construction space and form is on the judgment basis of quantized data. Such bottom-up dynamic design process has broken through imprisonment of traditional form and construction design has returned to the original point of rational creation. In this paper, a certain foundation is laid for theoretical researches on development, influence and future of parameterization design from the aspects of parameterization design concept, tool, scheme generation, its influence on design thinking, etc.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Lijun Xu ◽  
Shengzan Yan ◽  
Zhe Chen ◽  
Xin Chen

With the improvement of people’s cultural level, more and more museums are being built or renovated. The design of lighting products for museums is a specialized field that requires designers to take into account a variety of factors, such as safety, presentation, and maintainability. As museum lighting systems meet the needs of conservation, visitor experience, and maintenance, the traditional design process is limited by the experience of the designer and the actual situation of the museum, and the actual light conservation effect of the exhibits is difficult to quantify. We have designed a digital-twin-based intelligent lighting system for museums, which can facilitate museum managers to quantify and manage the light life of exhibits while providing a more immersive viewing experience and recognition effect for visitors.


2013 ◽  
Vol 443 ◽  
pp. 7-11
Author(s):  
Xi Ying Ding

This paper attempts to explore the application possibilities of a author programmed multi-agent system in a residential cluster layout in Beijing which was originally designed by the traditional approach. The author analyzed and evaluated the layouts with three environmental indices: relation with road, relation with green land, location in the building. The solution showed that the computer could generate the well performed layouts which could still be improved by the traditional approach. The cooperation of these two approaches can make the design process efficient, digital evaluated, controllable, aesthetic and creative.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fouad Jalal Mahmood

Purpose This study aims to trace the relationship between the evidence-based design (EBD) process and decision-making during the architectural design process, the barriers to informing health-care architects and possible methods to overcome these barriers. Design/methodology/approach This study aims to explore the barriers to the EBD process during the design process by reviewing the relevant literature and future steps to overcome these barriers and support design decisions. Findings The study shows that EBD is a relevant, useful tool for providing evidence that positively affects design decisions. This study divides EBD barriers into simple barriers and complex barriers, depending on the nature of the barrier. Additionally, methods to overcome these barriers are discussed to ensure the best use of EBD findings with a significant impact on health-care design decisions, as they are core elements in informing architects, especially when combined with the traditional design process. This study investigates how likely it is for the EBD to contribute optimally to design decisions depending on architects’ skills and cooperation with researchers. Originality/value This study can apprize health-care architects of the need to consider the role of EBD in improving the quality of design decisions, and the importance of combining EBD with the traditional design process to implement optimal design decisions.


Author(s):  
Steve Gill ◽  
Paul Johnson ◽  
James Dale ◽  
Gareth Loudon ◽  
Bethan Hewett ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Michele Germani ◽  
Marco Mandolini ◽  
Marco Marconi ◽  
Marta Rossi

Due to the increasing pressure of legislations and market, the environmental sustainability is becoming a key competitive factor for companies. In specific markets, as the Northern Europe one, customers are very careful on the quality and sustainability of products, thus companies has to design and manufacture green goods. In this context, there is a strong need of effective design tools and platform which allows to configure products applying the life cycle paradigm and with the “environment on mind”. Currently in the market there are only few examples of products designed taking into account the eco-design concepts. In particular, for mechatronic or energy using products only the use phase is usually considered and all the re-design strategies aim to reduce the energy consumption. This is essentially due to the fact that there is a lack of tools and design platforms, which are easy to use and well integrated with the traditional design tools and with the design processes of companies. This paper wants to demonstrate the usefulness of a set of interoperable eco-design tools, the G.EN.ESI platform, in supporting the re-design of a mechatronic product. The proposed case study, realized in collaboration with an Italian leading company in the sector of household appliances, focuses on the improvement of a domestic cooker hood with the final objective to obtain a more sustainable product. The in-depth experimentation, for the duration of more than 3 months, involved different stakeholders within the company (designers, environmental expert, etc.), with the aim to validate the G.EN.ESI platform tools in different phases of the re-design process. The case study showed that the use of the platform has supported the company in the identification of the environmental hot-spots and during the product re-design phase, considering the whole life cycle. The re-engineered cooker hood exhibits relevant improvements in the most important environmental and economic indicators (environmental impact, energy efficiency, disassemblability, recyclability, etc.). Also a detailed analysis of the platform usability has been performed in order to measure if the tools completely fulfil the expectations of the final users. Finally, the level of integration within the company processes has been evaluated with a dedicated questionnaire. The results of these last analyses showed that the G.EN.ESI platform is appropriate to support a company to improve the sustainability of their products without the needs to heavily alter the traditional design process.


1999 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 265-271
Author(s):  
Daiva Makutėnienė ◽  
Lionginas Čiupaila

Intelligent computer-aided design is impossible without the object of design, component parts, participants of the process and analysis of their relations. The control of these relations was performed without computer. Therefore the processes flew without optimal criteria and technics of optimisation. Renovation of a building will depend on three most important concerned groups involved in the process: customers; designing organisations; building and constructing organisations. The entire process of design—from the idea to complete documentation—must be planned and executed with consideration of goals aspired by the interested parties—customers, designers and construction organisations. This process should realise the cycles of design, co-ordination and expertise of final solution. There are one-stage or two-stage design processes in traditional design process (Fig 2). Development of the project by one or two stages is pointed out by the design task of customer and depends upon technical complexity of the object. Complex objects are designed by a two-stage design process. One-stage design (Fig 3) is used, when the object is not complicated and includes many typical constructions. A great deal of graphics, economical data, accepted standards, rules are used in today's design process. While designing a building, the information flow could be controlled with the help of intelligent systems of design. Some information systems can be applied to different parts of a building. Fig 4 represents the structure of information system for roof design. Any part of information system is a complex object. Parts of information system for roof design are related to graphical-geometrical information. Relations between elements of roof intelligent design system are represented in Fig 5. Structure of some elements of information system (Fig 6) and internal relations are complex and manifold, so managing is possible only by intelligent design system. During the process of intelligent system design the same participants take part as in the traditional process: customers, design organisations, building and constructing organisations, but the relations between these participants are of a new quality. Fig 7 represents the relations between traditional participants and the flow of up-to-date information. The process of intelligent design differs from the traditional one by the following features: the intelligent system includes features of traditional design (design, expertise, coordination, renewing), but it is the system of new technology and quality due to the possibility of real optimisation; the process of renovation of dwelling houses roofs has an important feature, namely, a possibility for the unification of the design process. Rational composition of unificated projects can and must be supported by computer aided graphical and non-graphical databases with possibilities of the intelligent design; relations between data groups of a design object (Fig 7—A, B, C and D) can be managed by computer intelligent software. The intelligent process has some problems: the main stages of the roof design are related to considerations and financial possibilities of customers, aesthetical and architectural evaluation. These stages are related by three main interested groups (customers, design organisations, building and constructing organisations) and other institutions of the government. They can be optimised only by computer at intelligent level; the problem of information flowing, because methods of presentation of data must be co-ordinated with customers, design organisations, building and constructing organisations. Control techniques must be provided for its managing; data and knowledge bases must be continuously formed and renewed until using “Internet” and other modern methods for information transmission.


Author(s):  
Olivier L. de Weck

The main goal of META design is to achieve a factor five (5x) improvement in product development speed for cyber-electro-physical systems compared to current practice. The method claims to achieve this speedup by a combination of three main mechanisms: 1. The deliberate use of layers of abstraction. High-level functional requirements are used to explore architectures immediately rather than waiting for downstream level 2, 3, 4 … requirements to be defined. 2. The development and use of an extensive and trusted component (C2M2L) model library. Rather than designing all components from scratch, the META process allows importing component models directly from a library in order to quickly compose functional designs. 3. The ability to find emergent behaviors and problems ahead of time during virtual Verification and Validation (V&V) and generating designs that are correct-by-construction allows a more streamlined design process and avoids costly design iterations that often lead to expensive design changes. This paper quantifies the impact of these main META mechanisms with a sophisticated System Dynamics (SD) model that allows simulating development projects over time. META compares favorably against a simulation of a traditional design process due to the generation of late engineering changes in a traditional design-build-test-redesign environment. The benchmark case analyzed in this paper contained 3,000 requirements, and the results show a dramatic improvement for project completion schedule with a demonstrated speedup factor of 4.4 (70 months versus about 16 months). In the simulated META process we used 3 layers of abstraction, 50% novelty and a model library integrity of 80% with 70% of problems are caught early. The results were also validated against data from the B777 Electric Power System (EPS) design project at UTC where a speedup factor of 3.8 was demonstrated. The paper contains a useful sensitivity analysis that helps establish requirements and bounds on the META process and tool-chain itself that should enable the desired 5x speedup factor.


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