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In the ongoing quest
to improve project planning and anticipate field problems
before they occur, a growing number of construction professionals
are using computer technology to build projects digitally
before actual construction begins. Four-dimensional CAD, which
combines 3D computer-aided design with the time element of
scheduling software, is gaining a foothold at construction
sites after years of incubation in academia and niche sectors
of the construction industry.
New PC-based 4D tools are helping
designers, contractors and owners visualize how projects are
built. But major time investments required to build 4D models
may limit widespread acceptance.
Early adopters say 4D is most
useful on complex projects. "It really helps with coordination
and sequencing issues," says Peter Allen, project manager
for general contractor DPR Construction Inc., Redwood City,
Calif. On the $72-million Bay Street entertainment and retail
complex in Emeryville, Calif., DPR used 4D CAD to help win
the job and shave several weeks off the project schedule,
he says.
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| TIME
SLICER Construction used 4D to plan steel erection
and shave three weeks from schedule. (Photo and Image
courtesy of DPR Construction) |
With several steel-framed retail
buildings, a five-level concrete parking garage and a steel-framed
movie theater complex located above a three- level concrete
parking garage, Bay Street required tight scheduling of concrete
placement and steel erection. By running a 4D simulation using
InviznOne software developed by Walt Disney Imagineering,
"we found we could accelerate the steel in the theater
area and save three weeks," says Allen. The first phase
is scheduled to be completed in October.
Disney's InviznOne tool, to be
marketed commercially by a yet-to-be-named start-up, is one
of several products that perform 4D modeling. While operating
procedures vary, most 4D products link 3D building components
with activities from a computer-generated schedule to simulate
construction of buildings and other structures. 3D CAD data
from AutoCAD, Microstation and other platforms can be imported
into the 4D software and arranged so building components correspond
with construction activities. A concrete floor slab, for example,
might be subdivided into pour zones, rather than shown in
its geometric design layout.
Schedule data can also be imported
from various platforms such as Primavera Project Planner and
Microsoft Project, as well as generic text files, says Kathleen
Liston, a 4D consultant who helped develop InviznOne. Each
activity in the schedule can be linked with one or more corresponding
objects in the 3D model, enabling the construction sequence
to play out like a movie.
The virtual construction scenes
can help teams plan interim activities such as concrete formwork,
crane operations and material laydown, says Bill Krill, structural
operations manager at San Francisco-based Swinerton Builders,
which is using 4D software from Virtual Step Inc., Hayward,
Calif., to build a $28-million office complex in San Francisco.
"It helped us identify crew sizes and probably saved
10% on the overall schedule," he says.
Swinerton is also using VirtualSTEP's
tools to plan construction for the $80-million San Francisco
Conservatory of Music, where a combination of new construction
and the rehabilitation of existing structures will require
intricate phasing when construction begins later this year.
"We have to know where to
work so we don't box ourselves out from the site," says
Krill. Swinerton has also used VirtualSTEP to import 3D building
components from a Web-based library.
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| TIME
SLICER Construction used 4D to plan steel erection
and shave three weeks from schedule. (Photo and Image
courtesy of DPR Construction) |
While contractors appear to be
the primary champions of 4D CAD, owners and designers also
are figuring into the mix. Computer chipmaker Intel Corp.
has used PM-Vision from CSA Inc., Marietta, Ga., to plan a
new $400-million-plus fab facility near Portland, Ore. Art
Stout, Intel's director of emerging technologies, says 4D
modeling has "eliminated a lot of design conflicts and
physical mockups" on the project, managed by Hoffman
Corp., Portland, Ore., and slated for completion later this
year.
Stout says CSA's database-oriented
approach offers long-term benefits by allowing embedded maintenance
schedules, operational schematics and other disparate documents
within the model. He eschews the term 4D for a more encompassing
"XD," signifying multiple databases working in concert
over a project life cycle.
CSA was one of the early developers
of 4D modeling, developing software used to plan large nuclear
powerplants in the 1970s, says Amadeus Burger, CSA president.
Companies such as Westinghouse and Duke Energy Services are
using CSA tools to plan the next generation of nuclear plants,
he says.
But benefits need to be weighed
against the time investment to build models. Allen says DPR
spent over 300 man-hours building a 3D model of Bay Street,
primarily because only 2D CAD data was available. "But
we'll recoup it in time savings," he says.
William A. Cook, senior vice president
for urs Corp., Los Angeles, agrees that "cost is still
a hurdle," but notes that time investments can drop from
several weeks to several days as 4D tools mature and more
projects are designed in 3D. urs is using InviznOne as construction
manager on a $230-million addition to the Santa Monica/UCLA
Medical Center, where a new addition is being built adjacent
to two existing buildings, one of which will be demolished.
"We found several phasing issues" using 4D and avoided
potentially costly change orders, he says.
The availability of 3D design
data has been a stumbling block, says Martin Fischer, director
of Stanford University's Center for Integrated Facilities
Engineering and a longtime 4D researcher. Much of today's
3D CAD data is based on simple CAD entities and not on still-evolving
industry-standard object definitions, he says. Also, owners
are often unwilling to pay for true 3D design and liability-conscious
designers are often unwilling to share data, he notes.
Several other vendors have introduced
4D tools in recent years. Bentley Systems Inc., Exton, Pa.,
has upgraded Schedule Simulator, a tool developed at Jacobus
Technology, which Bentley acquired in 1998, and has merged
it with its Dynamic Animator program for enhanced visualization.
Intergraph Corp., Huntsville, Ala.; Balfour Technologies LLC,
Bethpage, N.Y.; and Visual Engineering, New York, N.Y., also
offer 4D software.
Some firms have bypassed commercial
4D tools and developed in-house solutions. Denver-based Company
39, a Parsons Brinckerhoff subsidiary, has tied Primavera
schedules with 3D Studio Max animation to visualize airport
construction, says Doug Eberhard, chief technology officer
at Company 39.
"Not all projects lend themselves
[to the 4D tools]," he says, citing long, narrow highway
and transportation projects. "And ultimately it depends
on what the client is willing to pay for."
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