I like to claim to have been working
with BIM for over 20 years.
Together with many other BIM enthusiasts,
we’ve been trying to fix the AEC industry for decades now, by adding various
amounts of BIM magic to it. The results are still pretty dubious. ‘The jury is
still out’ on how well BIM has been doing, and even if the proverbial jury was
not out – I’m definitely not convinced that it is making a noticeable dent on
the performance of the global industry.
There is nothing wrong with the concept
of BIM. It is just no longer the solution to the ‘problem’.
Once it may have been, 20 or so years
ago – but when the conditions were right, it did not really caught on – and now
it is too late. The cost and effort needed to make it work on any level is
prohibited for most, within a dippy industry that does not value long-term investments
into tools and approaches.
A bit like trying to force the entire
financial sector speak fluent Latin in order for the Share market to become
more honest, transparent and productive.
It is time to look at our options to rejuvenate
this industry in a different way?
Wise people sometimes say, the solution
to a problem could as easily be in taking something away as adding-on something
else.
An over-salted soup may be made
palatable by the additions of herbs, spices or certain vegetables, but reducing
the salt in the first place could be an even more elegant solution.
Like, with fixing up an unpalatable soup
once it is already spoilt, we’ve been forcing BIM onto the AEC like an unwelcome
additive, expensive and feeble, still hoping that it’ll restore the murky stew.
Even though construction projects tend
to take longer to create than any average soup, there is still plenty of
opportunity in starting anew with an improved, less salty recipe.
Is there something obvious in the
industry’s processes that could be taken away without damaging the host and
assisting its healing?
The paper, for example?
The concept is simple: Create paperless
environments within the industry, enforce them and gradually increase to cover
larger and larger areas until they reach a critical cover, of no return.
There are a number of rules for the
creation and operation that must be followed for these paper-less environs to
function successfully, these I’ll omit in this writ- up, to keep the focus on
the knock-on effects, should this approach become the norm.
Unlike with BIM, where the results are
mostly measured in what they do to individual projects they’ve been applied to
(saved money, saved time, found xxxxx million clashes) – the success of the Paper-free
Construction Approach will be measured in the number of people affected by it
and what they’ll do once infected.
Since, unlike BIM where even on huge BIM
projects (like airports and Malls) most project participants manage to avoid
full (or indeed almost any) immersion in the approach and at best become
supportive bystanders, in PFCA projects everyone on the project becomes truly paper-free
too.
These paper-free thinking and working
people, once at peace with the approach will demand and incite developments of
meaningful digital tools, in turn raising the ‘coolness factor’ of the industry
by a couple of notches.
There will be the symptom called ‘Touched
by PFCA’ – applied to those that had delivered a project in a paper-free way,
no matter if as a consultant, a construction worker or a client representative.
In contrast to BIM campaigns, where somebody
touched by BIM, may talk enthusiastically about their experiences (or not), someone
that had survived and thrived in a Paper-free project will pass on the
‘disease’ with a lot of passion.
A newly ‘cool’ industry will attract
more paper-free thinking/working people, that will then stimulate its growth
even further.
The catalyst of the paper-free
environment will in fact sweep over the industry like a ‘good’ epidemic.
Ironically, a new generation of a (more successful)
BIM will be the natural progression from a Paper-Free craze.
Image from here:
https://missfoxglove.wordpress.com/2014/08/07/hello-kitty-flight-via-eva-air-from-taiwan/
thanks for the information Paper-free Construction
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