"Time to embrace a new way of building"
ARCHITECTURE | ENVELOPE | DFMA | COMPUTATION
Building Information Modeling
Building Information Modeling technology supports architects throughout the design process. Gain more insights earlier in the process to meet your clients’ requirements and deliver projects with improved quality and efficiency. Make better design decisions earlier in the process with insights into what your design will represent through visualization, coordination, collaboration and analysis tools. Architects use Building Information Modeling (BIM) throughout the design process to help improve quality and accelerate design processes with integrated workflows for concept design, modeling, multidiscipline coordination, and construction documentation.
BIM :
In any design and construction project there are an unlimited number of participants, as well as infinite interactions between parties. The projects are multidisciplinary and include information that is not necessary to all involved. So who is responsible for what in each project? How far does my responsibility go and where does yours start? BIM helps to order the complexity of this process.
Documentation :
BIM Documentation is fundamental to BIM and is needed at various stages with the project lifecycle as documented in PAS1192-2:2013.
BIM-specific documents provide project or owner/operator’s information that ensures all of the project team are aligned. This helps the team understand how the flow and management of data is produced and shared throughout the project lifecycle.
Projects with coordinated documentation have seen more efficient results, this is due to following a clear and concise set of documents produced at the beginning of the project. Because of our experience, we understand that it is important for documents to be tailored to the needs of the project and project teams.
https://www.bre.co.uk/documentation
Architectural visualization serves many critical functions to convey aesthetics, mass, function, and meaning of the architect’s conceptual or final design, in relation to the owner’s requirements and intent for the new structure.
The art and science of visually representing a proposed structure continue to thrive today as an art form and as a technical subset of architectural design. Architectural visualization services and techniques have developed into a distinct and thriving sub-market of the AEC industry. The architect or land developer’s vision can be expressed and experienced through a number of visually stunning technologies: