Opinion

BIM: When ‘collaboration’ is the hardest word

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Comments

  1. Great piece Anna. Whilst BIM enhances collaboration amongst teams that use it, it also needs a collaborative environment in place to use it in the first place. And in my view, without the right contracting approach, implementation will be as tricky, costly and slow as we have seen over recent years.

    You said “The industry needs to find ways to make it easier for a building owner to insist on collaboration.”

    I think the easier ways are already there. Clients just need to use them!

    Project alliancing has been around since the late 1980’s as a way of collaboratively contracting on projects. It forms a collaborative team (client-designers-builders) early in the process, and the payment mechanism means that no-one has to worry about being expected to cover high IT and learning costs from thin margins.

    I’m perplexed as to why the industry sees collaboration as a costly nice-to-have. As well as slowing down BIM exploitation, traditional contracting approaches add time and cost a lot to control and administer, whereas a collaborative team should be faster to set up, and use less resource to control and administer. If you want a low cost and fast project, a collaborative project alliance is the way to go!

    Having worked on project alliances and traditional jobs, if I was a client with money to invest, it would be a no-brainer. I wouldn’t let my suppliers choose to contract ‘traditionally’ just because that is what they are used to. If it was my money, there would be a collaborative team in place early, and BIM would have a key role in exploiting the collaboration to deliver a better project.

  2. Really interesting article. Thanks Anne. I sm studying BIM at the University of Salford and I have just started my dissertation on the social aspect of BIM and its impact of collaborative behaviours between people in construction. With all the lectures we attended at school, people from the industry addressed people’s attitudes are the most challenging in BIM journey. Therefore, i think this area shouldn’t be ignored and needs a collective effort from everyone working with BIM to add something to build the right collaborative behaviour that can harvest the full BIM potential. Many thanks for your article. I was delighted to read it.

  3. Good article Anna. Ian is absolutely right though – “that whilst BIM enhances collaboration amongst teams that use it, it also needs a collaborative environment in place to use it in the first place”. This really isn’t as difficult as people seem to think that it is, though you need to be very careful in the procurement process to attract the right players, and weed out those who “say” they are collaborative etc.

    The public sector especially needs to look seriously at its procurement strategies. Having a list of 10 or 12 contractors, calling it a framework and selecting on a mainly pricing criteria does not set the right tone to enable collaboration to take place. We desperately need client and business leaders who will innovate, be prepared to set out new strategies and then have the courage to carry them through.

    Unfortunately I don’t see many of them in either the client, contracting or consultancy sides of our wonderful industry.

    The right team mentality has to begin at the procurement stage with the client, but it also has to be supported and championed by both the contractor and the design team consultants. What is it that they find so difficult?

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