A Framework of BIM-Based Construction Project Monitoring System for OwnerSouksavath Losavanh
A presentation on topic "A Framework of BIM-Based Construction Project Monitoring System for Owner" by Souksavath Losavanh, The Twenty-Sixth KKHTCNN Symposium on Civil Engineering
November 18-20, 2013, Singapore
Presentation to the National Emergency Number Association (NENA) to include building information in Next Generation 9-1-1. Content includes an overview of standards and a data architecture that would work.
Uniclass 2015: As it lives and breathes | Empowering you in a BIM worldThe NBS
Slides from a presentation by Sarah Delany at the Empowering you in a BIM world event from NBS in June 2016.
Sarah is head of classification and a technical author at NBS with responsibility for the mechanical services sections in the NBS products. She joined NBS in 2002 and worked on the first launch of NBS Engineering Services and is now part of the team authoring NBS Create.
A Framework of BIM-Based Construction Project Monitoring System for OwnerSouksavath Losavanh
A presentation on topic "A Framework of BIM-Based Construction Project Monitoring System for Owner" by Souksavath Losavanh, The Twenty-Sixth KKHTCNN Symposium on Civil Engineering
November 18-20, 2013, Singapore
Presentation to the National Emergency Number Association (NENA) to include building information in Next Generation 9-1-1. Content includes an overview of standards and a data architecture that would work.
Uniclass 2015: As it lives and breathes | Empowering you in a BIM worldThe NBS
Slides from a presentation by Sarah Delany at the Empowering you in a BIM world event from NBS in June 2016.
Sarah is head of classification and a technical author at NBS with responsibility for the mechanical services sections in the NBS products. She joined NBS in 2002 and worked on the first launch of NBS Engineering Services and is now part of the team authoring NBS Create.
BIM for Facility Managers - Hani Afendi - Facilities Show, 19 June 2014Protectionandmanagement
Facilities Managers need to understand Building Information Modelling (BIM) processes and the full potential that its holds for delivering value and cost savings over a building's lifetime. To date BIM has largely evolved from the construction and architectural design side of the built environment. This presentation is ideal for Facilities Managers who want to take the next step to find out what impact it will have on them.
HKIBIM Networking Seminar on April 28, 2014 at Lecture Theatre LT-01, IVE (Morrison Hill), 6 Oi Kwan Road, Wan Chai, Hong Kong.
This HKIBIM networking Seminar provides the opportunity for all attendees to interact with the speaker and the local BIM community
Guest Speaker: Mr. Igor Starkov - Co-founder and President of EcoDomus Inc.
Mr. Igor Starkov President EcoDomus, Inc.
Mr. Starkov is a computer scientist and entrepreneur with over 25 years of experience in software development, including 14 years of experience leveraging technology to improve construction project delivery and management of the built environment.
Mr. Starkov’s experience in the AEC, IT, and Facilities Management arenas and his in-depth knowledge of BIM, COBie, and Lean workflows provide him with the unique capability of creating versatile information-enabled solutions.
Mr. Starkov co-founded EcoDomus in 2008, and made the company the leading provider of Lifecycle BIM solutions. EcoDomus is working with the clients around the world, including Google, Disney, US Government (GSA), Fedearl Aviation Administration (US), University of Southern California, Singapore's Ministry of Health (MOHH), NTT Facilities (Japan), and many others.
Seminar title: Building Information Modelling for Handover and Facilities Management
Current processes of designing and building new facility, operating and maintaining it are full of gaps, and valuable data is lost. The biggest problems exist with delivery of intelligent “as-built” information to the owner of a new facility, and keeping “as-maintained” BIM up-to-date. This session will explain how to populate and maintain data created during design & construction stage (including BIM in the field), enhance it during construction and commissioning using Lean processes, and incorporate into Facility Operations & Maintenance using COBie standard. Then we will review several case studies outlining how the leading facility owners use BIM for Facility Management.
Supporting Organizations:
BSOMES - http://www.bsomes.org.hk/
BuildingSmart Hong Kong - http://www.buildingsmart.org.hk/
CIAT-HK- http://www.ciat.org.hk/
CIC - http://www.hkcic.org/
HKIS - http://www.hkis.org.hk/
HKIBIM Website: www.hkibim.org
HKIBIM Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hkibim
HKIBIM Linkedin: http://bit.ly/HKIBIM
CTM Program: Terminology, Vocabularies, and BIMnovacsi
Development of controlled vocabularies by CSI, CSC, Netherlands, Norway, and others to establish an international buildingSMART Dictionary (IFD), its importance and benefits to practitioners, interoperability, and BIM development for the AEC Industry.
Stephen Hamil's preview of the BIM Toolkit was a hit at Ecobuild 2015 - we've uploaded the presentation, in case you missed it or want to see it again. #BIMTookit
Ramco ERP for Facility Management ServicesRamco Systems
Whether you are into hospitality & housekeeping, guarding & security or maintenance & engineering services, Ramco ERP for Facility Management Services (FMS) sector can help transform your business and accelerate success.
May Chapter Meeting: OmniClass, CSI Formats, and Their Role in BIM (Joint Mee...novacsi
Joint meeting between CSI Northern Virginia and DC Chapters was held May 11, 2011. Greg Ceton, Director of Technical Services for CSI, presented a unique perspective on the important and expanding role CSI has in the development and data management of Building Information Modeling (BIM) standards and practice guidelines. Traditional efforts have been focused on document-centric processes, today, standards and practice guidelines now need to address model-centric practices. BIM requires new approaches for organizing and managing the information generated by the model and the project team members that work with it to allow data to be exchanged seamlessly and evaluated correctly by all project participants. The presentation presented how various CSI formats are related and the impact each has to successful new project delivery methods and data management.
BIM Through The Project Timeline | Ecobuild 2016The NBS
Dr Stephen Hamil, Director of Design and Innovation at NBS looks at how BIM can be practically applied at every stage of a construction project. This presentation formed part of the Digital Building Theatre programme at Ecobuild 2016. You can find out more at https://www.thenbs.com/knowledge/ecobuild-2016/
Fog Computing: A Platform for Internet of Things and AnalyticsHarshitParkar6677
Internet of Things (IoT) brings more than an explosive proliferation of
endpoints. It is disruptive in several ways. In this chapter we examine those disruptions,
and propose a hierarchical distributed architecture that extends from the edge
of the network to the core nicknamed Fog Computing. In particular, we pay attention
to a new dimension that IoT adds to Big Data and Analytics: a massively distributed
number of sources at the edge.
BIM for Facility Managers - Hani Afendi - Facilities Show, 19 June 2014Protectionandmanagement
Facilities Managers need to understand Building Information Modelling (BIM) processes and the full potential that its holds for delivering value and cost savings over a building's lifetime. To date BIM has largely evolved from the construction and architectural design side of the built environment. This presentation is ideal for Facilities Managers who want to take the next step to find out what impact it will have on them.
HKIBIM Networking Seminar on April 28, 2014 at Lecture Theatre LT-01, IVE (Morrison Hill), 6 Oi Kwan Road, Wan Chai, Hong Kong.
This HKIBIM networking Seminar provides the opportunity for all attendees to interact with the speaker and the local BIM community
Guest Speaker: Mr. Igor Starkov - Co-founder and President of EcoDomus Inc.
Mr. Igor Starkov President EcoDomus, Inc.
Mr. Starkov is a computer scientist and entrepreneur with over 25 years of experience in software development, including 14 years of experience leveraging technology to improve construction project delivery and management of the built environment.
Mr. Starkov’s experience in the AEC, IT, and Facilities Management arenas and his in-depth knowledge of BIM, COBie, and Lean workflows provide him with the unique capability of creating versatile information-enabled solutions.
Mr. Starkov co-founded EcoDomus in 2008, and made the company the leading provider of Lifecycle BIM solutions. EcoDomus is working with the clients around the world, including Google, Disney, US Government (GSA), Fedearl Aviation Administration (US), University of Southern California, Singapore's Ministry of Health (MOHH), NTT Facilities (Japan), and many others.
Seminar title: Building Information Modelling for Handover and Facilities Management
Current processes of designing and building new facility, operating and maintaining it are full of gaps, and valuable data is lost. The biggest problems exist with delivery of intelligent “as-built” information to the owner of a new facility, and keeping “as-maintained” BIM up-to-date. This session will explain how to populate and maintain data created during design & construction stage (including BIM in the field), enhance it during construction and commissioning using Lean processes, and incorporate into Facility Operations & Maintenance using COBie standard. Then we will review several case studies outlining how the leading facility owners use BIM for Facility Management.
Supporting Organizations:
BSOMES - http://www.bsomes.org.hk/
BuildingSmart Hong Kong - http://www.buildingsmart.org.hk/
CIAT-HK- http://www.ciat.org.hk/
CIC - http://www.hkcic.org/
HKIS - http://www.hkis.org.hk/
HKIBIM Website: www.hkibim.org
HKIBIM Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hkibim
HKIBIM Linkedin: http://bit.ly/HKIBIM
CTM Program: Terminology, Vocabularies, and BIMnovacsi
Development of controlled vocabularies by CSI, CSC, Netherlands, Norway, and others to establish an international buildingSMART Dictionary (IFD), its importance and benefits to practitioners, interoperability, and BIM development for the AEC Industry.
Stephen Hamil's preview of the BIM Toolkit was a hit at Ecobuild 2015 - we've uploaded the presentation, in case you missed it or want to see it again. #BIMTookit
Ramco ERP for Facility Management ServicesRamco Systems
Whether you are into hospitality & housekeeping, guarding & security or maintenance & engineering services, Ramco ERP for Facility Management Services (FMS) sector can help transform your business and accelerate success.
May Chapter Meeting: OmniClass, CSI Formats, and Their Role in BIM (Joint Mee...novacsi
Joint meeting between CSI Northern Virginia and DC Chapters was held May 11, 2011. Greg Ceton, Director of Technical Services for CSI, presented a unique perspective on the important and expanding role CSI has in the development and data management of Building Information Modeling (BIM) standards and practice guidelines. Traditional efforts have been focused on document-centric processes, today, standards and practice guidelines now need to address model-centric practices. BIM requires new approaches for organizing and managing the information generated by the model and the project team members that work with it to allow data to be exchanged seamlessly and evaluated correctly by all project participants. The presentation presented how various CSI formats are related and the impact each has to successful new project delivery methods and data management.
BIM Through The Project Timeline | Ecobuild 2016The NBS
Dr Stephen Hamil, Director of Design and Innovation at NBS looks at how BIM can be practically applied at every stage of a construction project. This presentation formed part of the Digital Building Theatre programme at Ecobuild 2016. You can find out more at https://www.thenbs.com/knowledge/ecobuild-2016/
Fog Computing: A Platform for Internet of Things and AnalyticsHarshitParkar6677
Internet of Things (IoT) brings more than an explosive proliferation of
endpoints. It is disruptive in several ways. In this chapter we examine those disruptions,
and propose a hierarchical distributed architecture that extends from the edge
of the network to the core nicknamed Fog Computing. In particular, we pay attention
to a new dimension that IoT adds to Big Data and Analytics: a massively distributed
number of sources at the edge.
Zenoh is rapidly growing Eclipse project that unifies data in motion, data at rest and computations. It elegantly blends traditional pub/sub with geo distributed storage, queries and computations, while retaining a level of time and space efficiency that is well beyond any of the mainstream stacks. This presentation will provide an introduction to Eclipse Zenoh along with a crisp explanation of the challenges that motivated the creation of this project. We will go through a series of real-world use cases that demonstrate the advantages brought by Zenoh in enabling and optimising typical edge scenarios and in simplifying the development of any scale distributed applications.
Virtual Machine Allocation Policy in Cloud Computing Environment using CloudSim IJECEIAES
Cloud computing has been widely accepted by the researchers for the web applications. During the past years, distributed computing replaced the centralized computing and finally turned towards the cloud computing. One can see lots of applications of cloud computing like online sale and purchase, social networking web pages, country wide virtual classes, digital libraries, sharing of pathological research labs, supercomputing and many more. Creating and allocating VMs to applications use virtualization concept. Resource allocates policies and load balancing polices play an important role in managing and allocating resources as per application request in a cloud computing environment. Cloud analyst is a GUI tool that simulates the cloud-computing environment. In the present work, the cloud servers are arranged through step network and a UML model for a minimization of energy consumption by processor, dynamic random access memory, hard disk, electrical components and mother board is developed. A well Unified Modeling Language is used for design of a class diagram. Response time and internet characteristics have been demonstrated and computed results are depicted in the form of tables and graphs using the cloud analyst simulation tool.
SMART GRID INTEROPERABILITY: THE GREAT ENABLERMeisam Rezaeian
The use of standards-based protocols
enables the ability to support and
manage the multitude of technology
and devices required across the smart
grid, providing increased interoperability
and reduced operational cost.
When looking at new system solutions
to upgrade existing infrastructure, some
of the primary attributes to assess are
the network management capabilities,
ability to transition, and support for
existing and evolving technology.
Grid changes are coming, and a growing number
of vendors will participate in the process and add
further innovations. Interoperability will serve as
the prime enabler of these changes. Utilities will
be able to serve their constituents well only if
they choose an upgrade path based on a common
platform for change and find solutions that
accommodate upgrades across the whole spectrum
of the grid.
How to Achieve Cross-Industry Semantic InteroperabilityDoug Migliori
Interoperability, or the ability of computer systems or software to exchange or make use of information, is a requirement of all devices participating in today’s information economy. Traditionally, interoperability has been defined mostly in the context of network communications. But with millions of devices being connected in industries ranging from smart home and building automation to smart energy and retail to healthcare and transportation, a broader definition is now required that considers the cross-domain impact of interoperability on system-to-system performance. In this presentation, the speaker will discuss the need for a common service model and ontologies for semantic interoperability that support both IoT and business systems, based on article series at http://www.embedded-computing.com/semantic-interop
In this video from the Argonne Training Program on Extreme-Scale Computing 2019, Jeffrey Vetter from ORNL presents: The Coming Age of Extreme Heterogeneity.
"In this talk, I'm going to talk about the high-level trends guiding our industry. Moore’s Law as we know it is definitely ending for either economic or technical reasons by 2025. Our community must aggressively explore emerging technologies now!"
Watch the video: https://wp.me/p3RLHQ-lic
Learn more: https://ft.ornl.gov/~vetter/
and
https://extremecomputingtraining.anl.gov/archive/atpesc-2019/agenda-2019/
Sign up for our insideHPC Newsletter: http://insidehpc.com/newsletter
Applying Neural Networks and Analogous Estimating to Determine the Project Bu...Ricardo Viana Vargas
This paper aims to discuss the use of the Artificial Neural Networks (ANN) to model aspects of the project budget where traditional algorithms and formulas are not available or not easy to apply. Neural networks use a process analogous to the human brain, where a training component takes place with existing data and subsequently, a trained neural network becomes an “expert” in the category of information it has been given to analyse. This “expert” can then be used to provide projections given new situations based on an adaptive learning (STERGIOU & CIGANOS, 1996).
The article also presents a fictitious example of the use of neural networks to determine the cost of project management activities based on the complexity, location, budget, duration and number of relevant stakeholders. The example is based on data from 500 projects and is used to predict the project management cost of a given project.
Wireless FasterData and Distributed Open Compute Opportunities and (some) Us...
Ontology Across Building Emergency And Energ
1. Ontology Across Building, Emergency, and Energy Standards Presented by Deborah MacPherson and Michelle Raymond Building Service Performance Project
2. The problem is adapting to a rapidly changing world that requires efficient communication. Information about the built environment is central to both emergency and energy needs. There will never be a complete coherent model of everything, but a logical framework for a common core can be developed. Organizational Structure by Mike Bergman
3. For Ontologies Across Building, Emergency and Energy Standards to work, a number of languages and organizations need to work together as a web service over the internet. Some of those languages and organizations are identified here. The story begins with the development of STEP
4. The geometry of objects, the geometry of the earth, and the relative locations of objects on the earth all start to become very precise. EPISTLE, OASIS, and OGC are all formed in the same year in response to these new capabilities.
5. The internet keeps getting bigger. It is becoming more important to know where information belongs in a database or in the world. Building Information Modeling vendors are certified to comply with the Industry Foundation Classes. The STEP Standard Data Access Interface enables BIM databases to talk to other databases like never before.
6. Metadata starts to be standardized. Open communities of practice explode, Creative Commons is born, Ontolog convenes, gbXML goes online. oBIX, SVG, CAP, RDF/XML rapidly emerge, until finally we reach OWL
7. Everything seems to be working together fairly well, but Building Information is having interoperability problems. There is a schism Unlike geospatial data, building data does not have a common point of origin. Multi-layer, multi-participant collaboration faces tremendous issues of alignment and scale Handling geometry is part of the problem
8. The IFC's are frozen, vendors continue to develop their systems, the least common denominator is the only meeting ground. To avoid duplication the IFCs reference STEP 41 and 42 for shape representation. The IFD is standardized, a concept can exist only once! There are no duplicates!
9. Which brings us to today, when the IFD will be 2 years old on April 17. buildingSMART and others are working diligently on quality control and the accurate population of this shared resource. IFD and EPISTLE share much of the same ideas and have the same core structure, the initiatives are different. IFD only talks about types of things. EPISTLE will also store instances or individuals. To cover the same functionality as EPISTLE , IFD relies on the IFC standard.
10. Because there is so little time and so much to do - what shall be populated first? What can the most people agree on? What are the most logical elements to fill the top level? An example of collaboration and prioritizing is shown for OmniClass Table 49, Properties. Wherein the location properties will be hammered out with OGC in a few phone calls. Both developers and practitioners can use these classifications and appropriate terminology.
11. The issue today is modularity. A set of tools and rules is needed for cross-domain information exchange and representation. Activities that have been happening in parallel need to be able to converge in a controlled fashion.
12. Building standards should integrate with emergency standards BEFORE energy standards because NFPA, OSHA, NEMA and others almost agree on the names of things and the short list of important items to show. The geometry of energy is too organic to start with first. Information needs for emergencies are more consistent. Lessons learned can be applied to temperature measurements and regional differences with greater efficiency using the tools and rules needed for emergency standards.
13. Making the business case for a common ontology evolving from prior disparate efforts catalyzed by math and geometry. Who are the people that need to be involved? Standards already float across the semantic and pragmatic boundaries, the challenge today is to formalize in an ontology.
14. NIST's "Building Infomation Exchange for First Responders" project has cross-domain stakeholders. Source: Holmberg, Opening slides for the Building Information Exchange with First Responders Workshop October 15-16, 2008, "Holmberg BIEFR Workshop Oct08.ppt"
15. As in Emergency Response, there are energy cross-domain stakeholders . The "Smart Energy Grid" can be considered as both distributing power to buildings AND though-out buildings. Reasoning over building geometry is key for many decision-support tasks in Energy Services. Source: Bosquet, M.L., "GridWise Standards Mapping Overview", Pacific Northwest National Laboratory," March, 2004. Source: Boehm, Robert, "UNLV Zero or Near-Zero Energy House Projects in Las Vegas", presented at CERL: Net-Zero Energy for Communities workshop, February 3, 2009.
18. Buildings do not live in a vacuum. Current representations of the larger built environoment are not standardized, this work moves towards formal representation and exchange
20. Building Models are too big to exchange quickly Extract only those elements needed Lightweight Standalone Interoperable To query floorplans and other building drawings
21. Its not about style, but which information is most relevant and shown first, then a stragetic order to drill down as more information is needed.
22. Static Data (1S69) Building Information (1SS0) Address (1SS1) Compass directions and Building side labels (A,B,C,D) (1SS2) Name (if different than address) (1SS3) Keybox Location (1SS4) Disambiguation: Rapid Entry System (1SS5) Commissioning Date (1SS6) Construction Type (1SS7) Structural Features (1SS8) Stories (1SS9) Above Ground (1SSA) Below Ground or Number Basements (1SSB) Sprinklered / Not Sprinklered (1SSC) Occupant Information (1SSD) Occupancy Type (1RJ3) Number Occupants (day/night) (1RJ4) Use Group(s) (1SSE) Contact Information (1R7N) Building Owner (1SSF) Facility Manager (1SSG) Building Engineer (1SSH) HVAC Contact (1SSI) Gas Company Contact (1SSJ) Power Company Contact (1SSK) Water Department Emergency Contact (1SSL) State Hazardous Materials Duty Officer (1R7V) Central Service Agency (CSA) contact (1SNN) Room Phone Numbers: Assigned to the wall jacks in each room, only tracked if the owner/operator chooses to do so. Room phone numbers relate to where a 911 calls might originate from. (1SSM)
23.
Editor's Notes
For example, the NIST sponsored: "Building Information Exchange for First Responders" working groups. The intended results will impact standards from NFPA, NEMA (industry), NEMA (emergency), IAI, ICC, plus have defacto acceptance through demonstrated use.