Litcius/Paper detail

Embracing BIM in its totality: a Total BIM case study

Oliver Disney, Mattias Roupé, Mikael Johansson, Alessio Domenico Leto

2022Smart and Sustainable Built Environment40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Purpose Building information modeling (BIM) is mostly limited to the design phase where two parallel processes exist, i.e. creating 2D-drawings and BIM. Towards the end of the design process, BIM becomes obsolete as focus shifts to producing static 2D-drawings, which leads to a lack of trust in BIM. In Scandinavia, a concept known as Total BIM has emerged, which is a novel “all-in” approach where BIM is the single source of information throughout the project. This paper's purpose is to investigate the overall concept and holistic approach of a Total BIM project to support implementation and strategy work connected to BIM. Design/methodology/approach Qualitative data were collected through eight semi-structured interviews with digitalization leaders from the case study project. Findings were analyzed using a holistic framework to BIM implementation. Findings The Total BIM concept was contingent on the strong interdependences between commonly found isolated BIM uses. Four main success factors were identified, production-oriented BIM as the main contractual and legally binding construction document, cloud-based model management, user-friendly on-site mobile BIM software and strong leadership. Originality/value A unique case is studied where BIM is used throughout all project phases as a single source of information and communication platform. No 2D paper drawings were used on-site and the Total BIM case study highlights the importance of a new digitalized construction process.

Topics & Concepts

Building information modelingOriginalityProcess (computing)EngineeringComputer scienceProcess managementKnowledge managementSystems engineeringQualitative researchOperations managementSociologyOperating systemScheduling (production processes)Social scienceBIM and Construction Integration3D Surveying and Cultural HeritageConstruction Project Management and Performance