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Patrick Mays, AIA
Patrick Mays, AIA
With over 30 years of AEC experience, Mr. Mays is part of the core team driving the AEC industry strategy at Dassault Systèmes. He was the General Manager for North America at Graphisoft, and served as CIO at NBBJ Architects where he led the firm’s transition to BIM in the 1990s.

Façade Design and Fabrication: The Expensive Disconnection

 
September 4th, 2014 by Patrick Mays, AIA
 

facade3

Most BIM technologies today disconnect the production of permit drawings from the processes for fabrication and installation. When owners include subcontractors in preconstruction services (as they often do with general contractors) they have the ability to coordinate these activities and reduce errors.

What is needed then is a data backbone to connect the building design to the fabrication detailing and installation sequences. It is common practice to have architects design a façade, independently from the manufacturer who fabricates the façade, and also independently from the general contractor and subcontractors who install the façade system.

Construction projects have included waste levels of more than 25%, and a major portion of that waste is related to the building envelope and façade. Waste consists of redundant document production, unused stored materials, idling workers, rework of installations, and other factors.

Tweet: A major portion of construction project waste is related to the building envelope and façade #LeanCon @Dassault http://ctt.ec/4fGS1+

Tweet: “A major portion of construction project
waste is related to the building envelope and façade”

Owners and general contractors need to understand how much waste is connected to façade design engineering and planning processes.

New Contract Structure

The Design-Bid-Build relationship is the traditional contract model. Unfortunately, it makes it difficult for owners to drive project efficiency because of a lack of transparency in business processes and cost management systems.

In these circumstances, no one can take ownership of cost management over the entire life of a construction project. The Design-Build-Operate relationship is one answer to this issue.

In this form of agreement owners have the ability to coordinate the work of general contractors, subcontractors, building product manufacturers, operation and maintenance companies, and other stakeholders, in order to find a better way to deliver projects.

This approach makes building construction more like large scale product manufacturing, which historically has had much less waste.

Tweet: #LeanCon makes building construction more like large scale product manufacturing @Dassault3DS http://ctt.ec/pEugr+

Tweet: “#LeanCon makes building construction
more like large scale product manufacturing”

Information Exchange Problems

When façade design engineers make fabrication documents, information exchange is a critical issue. If a building has a complex façade shape, it is important to seamlessly generate accurate 3D geometry and to produce specific 2D drawings for CNC cutting machines.

Current BIM software has limited capability to produce 3D geometry appropriate to fabrication. Therefore it makes sense for architects to access libraries of parts used by a manufacturer rather than creating similar information from scratch.

It is hard for façade design engineers to adapt to frequent design changes and reproduce façade production documents on the fly, unless they are directly connected to the architect’s model.

Installation Planning

Installation is, of course, an important perspective from which to improve productivity. If the unique types and shapes of façade panels grow in number and variety, it becomes increasingly difficult to manage onsite installation.

If delivery sequence and installation processes of panels are not managed well onsite, it is hard to understand which panels should be installed in which positions. This could result in a large waste of time and resources.

To compound this problem neither manufacturers nor architects include cranes, scaffolds, and other installation equipment in the documents. This third data source must also be included to optimize the delivery process.

In summary, we need new contracts, new processes, and new tools to address the massive amount of waste in building construction. The separate processes of design, fabrication detailing, and installation planning need to be combined into a single environment to properly understand costs and risks in building projects. A promising solution for such an environment is on the cloud.

Tweet: Façade Design and Fabrication: The Expensive Disconnection #LeanCon @Dassault3DS http://ctt.ec/8e7aU+

Click to Tweet this article.


Related Resources

Watch an 8-minute demo of Dassault Systèmes’ technology platform dedicated to Façade Design for Fabrication, Integrated Planning and Façade Detailing

Façade Design for Fabrication Industry Solution Experience

Industrialized and Collaborative Construction

#CATIAcloud


Watch AECCafe.com’s video interview with Patrick Mays

Categories: AEC, Dassault Systèmes, Façade Design, Technologies




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