I don’t know the lay of the engineering land in North America, but I’d still bet on BIM coming into bridges in a big way based on this discussion. The objections here are nothing that wasn’t said in Australia a few years ago yet my current company and former company both use Revit as their main bridge drafting software now. Their reasons for getting started were different and a few years apart, but it was necessary for some projects and then it didn’t make sense to retain expertise across the whole drafting team in both AutoCAD and Revit. To be clear, the deliverables are still mainly 2D drawings in PDF format and Revit handles this just fine. Also to be clear, I’m not a drafter/modeller myself as it’s common in Australia for consultancies to have ‘pure’ engineers and ‘pure’ drafters, so my knowledge on the subject comes from talking to the drafters.
I’ve given specific responses to some of the objections below. They were all overcome for various reasons and I think might help Bridge_Man’s effort to predict the future.
PEinc said:
It seem to me that BIM would be more useful on a structure (like a building) that is more complicated than a bridge. Just because you can BIM a structure, it doesn't mean it will be worth the expense.
The only expense is learning the new software, which Autodesk is trying to minimise – or is required to be learned for other reasons anyway. Simple structures are simple to model in 3D once you’re familiar with the software, to the point that quick mock-ups at proposal stage (no pay) are becoming more common as sales tools. I imagine that the first CAD projects cost more than hand drafting because of the difference in skill level in the workforce for the two methods, but hand drafting still lost.
STrctPono said:
Being able to visualize an object in 3D in your head and replicate that image in 2D drawings can be difficult and is an art. This is something that not every Engineer can do. We don't have the luxury of seeing and displaying everything in 3D like some other Engineering disciplines do.
Not sure if this is an objection or a sales pitch TBH. The other side of the coin is that builders sometimes have trouble visualising the 3D structure from the 2D drawings, or using the 2D drawing just takes more effort on their part. Having the model alongside the drawings overcomes this. Contractors who know we work in Revit are increasingly requesting the models, even with our disclaimers that the 2D drawings are the design and using the model is at their risk.
TheRick109 said:
I think planless contracting isn’t going away, but won’t be taking over any time soon.
Agree but, as stated above, planless contracting isn’t the only way BIM is used. I’ve never done it in 6 years of primarily working on Revit projects.
bridgebuster said:
some 3D drawing is helpful but we've been able to build complex structures without it; maybe I'm too old school.
They’ve been built with BIM too, so that’s not a differentiator. There have been some almighty balls-ups that BIM clash detection would have avoided, and these stick in memories.
BridgeSmith said:
As we saw a few years ago with that pedestrian bridge in Miami, relying too much on models and FEA can have disastrous results. There's good reasons for working through, and thinking through, complex structures without (or at least in addition to) computer models and analysis.
I don’t agree with your assessment of the problems with that bridge. If you were to read the report of the inquest into the Westgate bridge collapse in 1970 (Australia), you could easily change a few names (and structural details) and think you were reading about the Miami collapse. The problems were on the capacity side of the calculations, not the analysis side but, more fundamentally, relatively novel structure types that didn’t get the attention they needed from senior engineers. Also designers of very high standing whose reputation quelled the doubts people felt when the design didn’t seem right, and when things started going wrong on site. Nothing is new; bridges collapsed before computers.
The impetus for BIM could come from any of several directions, such as:
- Government mandate like in the UK. Maybe less likely in USA, but then a metric mandate was tried once upon a time (I understand).
- Client whim. One company here got started when one of their key clients (D&C road contractor) thought it was odd that they produced 3D road designs but there were gaps at the bridge locations. They started with doing it as an extra to tick the box—without extra fee of course—so then successfully tried to use the model to produce design drawings and won back the profit margin on future jobs.
- The bridge is part of a building development where the rest of the project is using BIM. Might never happen for a government agency but I do know one privately-delivered bridge that fell into this category.
- Consultancy that wants an overseas job has to use BIM for that and then goes from there.
- A consultancy’s overseas head office mandates it, or uses its expertise to support the US branch as a marketing differentiator.
- Asset manager wants it.
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- For the reasons above, everyone else is doing it. This might be when the government agencies decide it’s the way to go.