That’s a hell of a long title, I know.
And I like it like that. The post will be longish too –
it is a complicated subject.
Yet, I will not spend much time on explaining the
difference between Real and Pretend BIM.
Call me arrogant. Those that know the difference will
understand my point.
I have long given up on BIM and on the professional
integrity of the global AEC.
Sad, but true.
Not that the ‘Pretend BIM’, alive and kicking and moving
from strength to strength is much worried about me not supporting it.
It has plenty of followers prepared to daily swallow the
dogma with no questions asked.
The Global AEC seems unflustered too, on how low the
professional integrity and technical capability of those that run it have sunk
to, in general.
I said it before, I am noting it again: what is seen
nowadays as a thriving ‘new’ approach to give the AEC a big kick to
reinvigorate itself is still only a ‘Pretend BIM’.
The real thing, born sometime in the 1980s is these days
surviving only in little isolated pockets of the global AEC industry, practiced
by local firms or individuals.
The fact that it is still surviving here and there is of
course good news and gives hope to another seemingly unstoppable trend getting
challenged at some point in the future.
The trend, that originated somewhere in the 1980s too –
and my term for it is, ‘The Global Takeover of the AEC consultancy Market by a Controlling
Few’.
I’m of course, talking about the AECOMs, Atkinses, and other
‘Top 100 Engineering Consultancies’ that for years have been gobbling up small
local engineering firms East to West, North to South.
First there were doing local mergers, with the goal of
becoming the biggest in the block and then came the acquisitions of often
family firms with long history of practicing – to reach the obvious climax when
the big fish turned onto one another and nowadays are only a handful of names ever
considered for providing consultancy services at big, global construction
projects.
There truly are very few fish circling the BIG waters of
the Global AEC industry.
Infrastructure projects are the worst, but general
building is not far behind, look at the participant’s names on almost any newly
built hospital, airport, school or community centre, almost anywhere in the
world. And the lists get pretty reparative.
There is hardly anything surprising in this trend. Other
industries had done it, some quite a long time ago, financial institutions, banks,
the transportation, hospitality even the educational industry.
So, why should not Engineering Consulting too?
Climb down from the flashy promotional movies of these
giant organisations citing thousands of employees spread over the entire globe
with an equal number of expertise on offer from any conceivable sub-subject
within the art and craft of construction (the Atkinses, AECOMs and the like)
and crawl into the real world of making projects work by utilising these –
overblown, almost exclusively profit oriented, faceless organisations with
mostly questionable professional capabilities.
It is not necessary the individuals that they employ that
one finds difficult and/or underqualified for the job, many of the old school
engineers have survived in the new environment to flash up a bit of genuine professional
work here and there – but their ability to do so is highly limited by the
machinery they are locked in.
There are never enough hours to do the job properly,
never enough resources to support them well and timesheets and utilisation
percentages hanging forever over their heads are ready to sabotage their KPIs,
annual performance reviews and long term career prospects.
So, the ‘old’ often compromise on their professional
values forever just to earn a living. The ‘young’ have never had the
opportunity to learn to act technically/professionally due to such hard-core
business driven environments, so they do what is best for their careers and
adopt.
Leaving end-clients, governments, and the entire global
industry to pick up the’ tab’ (financial, professional, moral etc.) of trying
to pull off larger-and-larger engineering projects with thinner and thinner
professional supports.
Some of the more speculative parts of the global AEC
client segment (developers for example) know very well this phenomenon to be
true but are also benefiting from it when the gamble works right for them – so
why even consider changing it?
As long the hot potatoes of risk are passed onto others,
the wheels keep turning, who cares if the big name engineers do not know what
they are doing?
This topic is worthy enough to be explored on its own –
my previous attempts have made little impacts on the forums I tried to raise it
– it is a ‘hot potato’ on its own, something few are prepared to acknowledge,
it impacts too deeply on most of the people that make up the industry they
should by default be needing to also clean up, if for nothing else for the
survival of the basic engineering skills that were built up over centuries.
Add to it the big (or pretend to be big) global drive to
have (the pretend) BIM as a solution for the improvement of the industry infused
into construction projects and the end results are disastrous.
I daily meet representatives of these giant organisations
claiming to be absolute leaders in BIM (as well as everything else, of course) while
producing non-BIM documentation that would miss basic QA tests of old
hand-drawn drawings by a mile and turn many-a good masters of the art and craft
in their respected graves.
These big name practitioners hide behind scopes, roles
and responsibilities to produce rubbish and rely on the ignorance of those that
are supposed to take them to the task of delivering something worthwhile for
the end user.
Of course they are rarely questioned, the representatives
of the other side (the end user) are staffed from the same pool – these quasi
engineers/business/project managers move seamlessly between the various
monsters of the ‘A list consultancies’. In fact the monsters themselves often
act in multiple, conflicting roles on projects that a healthy industry should never
tolerate.
The AEC is doomed as long as these A-listers keep growing
and taking up more of the market share and BIM with it too.
But, as indicated in the beginning of the article, I see
some hope too.
Eventually, of course nature will take its course and
small, specialist, technically capable consultancies will start reclaiming ground
and they will be the ones to push REAL BIM (or other future approaches that
have fundamentals in engineering and working better) to become more mainstream
and the norm.
In turn the entire industry may find its need rise for professional
integrity and technical proficiency across the board.
Give BIM a chance?
Spare the little fish that still have professional integrity,
technical capability and the willingness to change the game and they may find
the way to use it for the betterment of all….(in spite the odds stacked heavily
against them).
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