Digital Construction

It’s the Uniclass classification system, but not as we know it

A train platform annotated with Uniclass codes
That Uniclass 2015 is the classification system used to organise information across all construction industry disciplines is something of a given, but how else can the system be used?
To find out more, BIMplus grabbed a few minutes with Tina Pringle, who is not only director of technical information at NBS, but also a member of the team that devised Uniclass 2015.

Perhaps we ought to start with a reminder of Uniclass’s role

Used as a way to identify and manage the vast amount of information that’s involved in a construction project, Uniclass is also a requirement for BIM projects as set by the ISO 19650 series of standards.

In short, the classification of objects and assets is allowing for greater consistency and a ‘shared language’ among companies and organisations, resulting in a more standardised approach, easier communication and more robust record keeping. It contains tables classifying items of any scale, from a large facility such as a railway, down to products such as a CCTV camera in a railway station. The classifications within the tables allow buildings, landscape and infrastructure to be classified under one unified scheme.

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