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ARCH 653

Building Information Modeling

Image courtesy of:


Ryder Architecture Limited

Slides are made based on Autodesk BIM Curriculum, Greenwold, S., and D. Driver. (2007). Building Information
Modeling with Revit Architecture: Lecture Notes, with some additional content created by Wei Yan, Texas A&M
University.

Building Information Modeling (BIM)


A BIM is a digital representation of physical and functional characteristics of a
facility. As such it serves as a shared knowledge resource for information about
a facility forming a reliable basis for decisions during its lifecycle from inception
onward.
- National Institute of Building Sciences, National Building Information
Modeling Standard(NBIMS), 2008
Building Information Modeling (BIM) is a new approach to design, construction,
and facility management in which a digital representation of the building process
is used to facilitate the exchange and interoperability of information in digital
format. BIM is beginning to change the way buildings look, the way they
function, and the ways in which they are designed and built.
-Eastman, C. et al. BIM Handbook: A Guide to Building Information
Modeling for Owners, Managers, Designers, Engineers and
Contractors, Wiley, 2008

Building Information Modeling


BIM is an integrated workflow built on coordinated, reliable
information about a project from design through construction and
into operations.

OWNERS

BUILDERS

BUILDING
INFORMATION
MODELING

ARCHITECTS

CIVIL
ENGINEERS
MEP SYSTEMS
ENGINEERS
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STRUCTURAL
ENGINEERS

Building Information Modeling


Integrated Project Delivery

Explore real world design scenarios with different disciplines


interfacing with the data differently (from different data views).

Architects leverage building information modeling for the


building design.

Structural engineers work with the same data presented


graphically in the form of framing, bracing diagrams and
structural design and analysis.

MEP Engineers can use the same data to layout, design and
perform analysis on the HVAC systems.

2007 Autodesk

Building Information Modeling


Managing Change

BIM solutions manage iterative changes in a building model


throughout the design process all the way through to the
design, construction, and operational phases.

A change to any part of the database is replicated in all other


associated parts.

Advantages of using a database for a real design project:

2007 Autodesk

Improves drawing coordination

Reduces drawing errors

Saves time spent manually checking and coordinating


documents

Reduced costs

Building Information Modeling


Bidirectional Associativity

Definition: Changes to any part of the design are immediately reflected


in all associated parts. Bidirectional associativity is applied automatically
to every component, view, and annotation
Example: A change in the dimensions of a wall is reflected in all
elements such as windows, doors, ceilings, and electrical outlets.

2007 Autodesk

Building Information Modeling


Parametric Relationships

Relationships among the elements in a building model.

Enable the software to coordinate and manage the changes


made to the building model.

Created automatically by software, or created by the user.


Components

Parametric
Change Views
Engine
Annotations

2007 Autodesk

Building Information Modeling


Examples

Examples of bidirectional associativity:

Flip a section line and all views update.

Draw a wall in plan and it appears in all other views including material
takeoffs.

Examples of parametric relationships:

A floor is attached to the enclosing walls. When a wall moves, the


floor updates to remain connected to the walls.

A series of equidistant windows have been placed along a wall.


When the length of the wall changes, the windows redistribute to
remain equidistant across the length of the wall.

2007 Autodesk

BIM: Features and Benefits


Modeling not Drawing or Drafting

Increasing accuracy and efficiency in the design, construction, and operation processes

Object-based Modeling
Database of semantically-rich building objects and properties
Computability: cost estimation, energy consumption, etc.

3D Modeling
Design visualization
Generating 2D construction documents

Parametric modeling engines


Design intent
Design change and options: quick, interactive, early and late design phases

Building Information Modeling


Revit Architecture and BIM

Revit is purpose-built [with domain knowledge] software for


building information modeling.

Traditional drafting and CAD software: illustrations are


independent of one another, e.g. plans, elevations, and sections.

In BIM software such as Revit, a design is a series of intelligent


objects and elements with parametric attributes.

You extract different (3D model) views from the single


database, e.g. a 2D elevation or 3D rendering.

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BIM (Revit) Data Structure and


Organization
- Categories, Families, Types, and
Instances

Working with Revit Elements and Families


Building Elements

Building elements are the building blocks of a project.

When you place an element in a model, the individual element is


called an instance of that element type.

Instances can be classified as Model, Annotation, and View.


Model

Elements such as walls, windows, doors, and


roofs that help in the 3D representation of the
building design.

Annotation

Elements such as dimensions, tags, and


elevation symbols that establish context or add
supplementary information to document a
building design.

View

Elements such as plans, elevations, sections,


3D views, and schedules that dynamically
represent the parts of a building model.

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Working with Revit Elements and Families


Building Element Types

There are five categories of building elements.

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Working with Revit Elements and Families


Building Element Types

There are five categories of building elements.

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Categories, Families, Types, and Instances


Categories: All objects in the building model are assigned a category.
All doors in a project belong to the category Doors. This broad
category is further broken down into families.
Families: Families are groupings of like geometry. Continuing with
the door example, a single flush door belongs to a different family than
a double door with glass in it because the geometry of the two types of
doors is different.
Types: All design objects have a type. (A type is the same as a class.)
The type defines what properties (values) an object has, how it
interacts with other objects, and how it draws itself into each different
kind of representation. (with a family, different types have the same set
of parameters but different values).
Instances: An instance is simply a single object of a type in the
building model.
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Wall:

Wall:

Working with Revit Elements and Families


Families

Families are groups of similar elements.

A family integrates elements that have the same parameters,


identical use, and similar graphical representation.

Every family can contain multiple types.

1.

Double glass door

2.

Overhead-sectional
glass door

3.

Single-flush vision
door

4.

Single-flush door

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Working with Revit Elements and Families


Families

Families are groups of similar elements.

A family integrates elements that have the same parameters,


identical use, and similar graphical representation.

Every family can contain multiple types.

1.

Double glass door

2.

Overhead-sectional
glass door

3.

Single-flush vision
door

4.

Single-flush door

A door can easily be swapped for a different kind of door because they
are in the same category. You cannot make a wall and then change it
into a window because they are in different categories.

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