“We want everyone to have the same understanding about how much information should go into each element of a building model, and for what uses those models are suitable,” said Dmitri Alferieff, the director of the BIMForum. “This specification will eliminate much of the confusion that comes with having different expectations for what should be in the models.”
Alferieff noted that the new development specifications allow model authors to define what their models can be relied on for and allow other users to understand the value, and limitations, of models they receive. A team of 16 contractors, engineers and architects co-chaired by Jan Reinhardt with Adept Project Delivery and Jim Bedrick with A/E/C Process Engineering began drafting the standards in early 2011.
“The key to eliminating confusion is setting common expectations for everyone involved in a project,” said James Vandezande, AIA, principal at HOK, who served on the BIMForum committee that crafted the new standards. “This specification is a tool that levels expectations between different team members about the information contained in the models.”
Officials with the BIMForum published a draft version of the specification earlier this year and sought comments from the broader construction community. Nearly 100 people provided input, which helped the drafting committee refine the specification. Now that the specification is finalized, the BIMForum is making it open to the entire construction, architectural and design community and encouraging them to use it as a reference standard in Building Information Modeling agreements and execution plans, Alferieff added.
For more information and to download the new specification, go to www.bimforum.org/lod.