flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Dotting the I in IPD

Dotting the I in IPD

Two collaboration tools, Bluebeam PDF Revu 8 and eBuilder Enterprise, are helping Building Teams integrate project files and information.


By By Jeff Yoders, Senior Associate Editor | August 11, 2010
This article first appeared in the 201002 issue of BD+C.

 Bluebeam PDF

Collaboration software is going beyond just sharing files. It is being used to enable full building information modeling early in design. Two programs are enabling Building Teams to more easily share the information in BIM and use it for integrated project delivery: Bluebeam Software, which just released the newest version of its AEC-specific PDF collaboration tool; and eBuilder Enterprise, a Web-based capital project and program management tool used by owners and real estate professionals.

PDF Revu 8: beyond PDF markup to file management

Architects and contractors have been using paperless tools such as Bluebeam PDF Revu for much of the past decade. Over its first seven previous versions Bluebeam has evolved from a PDF creation tool born in the aerospace industry to one of the most popular PDF markup and revision tools in the AEC market.

The company's latest release, Bluebeam PDF Revu 8 (CAD edition), is moving beyond digitizing paper to full project collaboration and management. It features Microsoft SharePoint and Bentley ProjectWise integration and a new file manager that lets users search, “pin,” and integrate their documents with other users' systems. The new version also has a Revit plug-in that can integrate it with Revu.

“We don't speak in terms of being a PDF editor anymore,” Bluebeam CEO Richard Lee told me. “We're really focused on providing workflow and collaboration software. You will see in the future a lot of functionality and features designed around how people work. The fact that it is in PDF is just convenient.”

Reports in bluebeam PDF

The most noticeable change in Revu 8 is a new “file access tab” on the left panel of the user interface. It allows mouse-over preview of any PDF and shows the location of the file, whether it's on your hard drive or in a shared project management program such as SharePoint. The access tab's history area gives a quick view of all of the PDF files you looked at recently.

“Users told us, 'I want to be able to get to the PDFs I work with quickly, whether they're on a SharePoint drive or on my machine,'” said Don Jacob, VP of engineering at Bluebeam. “Our mid-size to large AEC users want better integration.”

The SharePoint integration offers an easy connection to files in the document management platform. A new explorer panel, similar to Windows Explorer, is embedded in the file access tab in Revu 8. From that panel you can automatically navigate the SharePoint library and check files in and out without having to switch between Bluebeam and SharePoint.

You can also check version histories of files in the library from the explorer and “pin” them to projects and documents on your hard drive. The functionality seems to work similarly for ProjectWise, but I couldn't try that one out, as I was unable to obtain a review copy of ProjectWise.

The “pinning” feature, itself is a new addition that addresses a major pain point many architects and contractors have when managing project files: keeping them together and organized. With two mouse clicks you can pin any file and it will stay in your access tab (with a pushpin designating its file as such) with all of its history information available to you on mouse-over. You can pin files to a project or a group of projects.

This flowchart

The tool sets are also improved in Revu 8. Some of the new markup tools include representations of people (good for scale) and welding markups for fabrication drawings. The personal toolbar in Revu 8 is more customizable, too, allowing you to add any Revu 8 function to it. This is good for companies that use one toolbar layout for architects, a different one for engineers, and even more customized layouts for super-users.

Finally, one of the smallest but best additions to Revu 8 is hyperlinking within annotations for fabrication drawings. Many subcontractors and fabricators bemoan the lack of reference documentation in computer-generated shop drawings. How can you access “Appendix 6” when all you've been given is “page 300?” By adding actions to an annotation, anyone who has page 300 automatically also receives a hyperlink to Appendix 6 in Revu 8. In the war against paper-based workflows, it's the small victories such as this that will carry the day for paperless.

E-Builder: Integrated for project management

E-Builder Enterprise is a Web-based project and program management application that helps facility owners and operators—and the AEC companies that provide services to them—address the challenges associated with the planning, design, construction, and operation of complex capital projects.

E-Builder clients are primarily facility owners with ongoing capital programs (e.g., additions, renovations, new facilities), such as Inova Health System. All that users need to use the system is a browser, username, and password, and it can be accessed anywhere via the Web. Some of the core aspects of the system include cost control, schedule management, change management, and construction administration.

“The entire e-Builder system is SAS 70 Type II certified,” said Jonathan Antevy, CEO of e-Builder. “It's a significant on-going investment but it has become the standard that our clients demand of us.” Antevy says that his company has been developing Web based software-as-a-service (SaaS) since its founding in 1995. “Our business is not built for a specific platform like Windows or Mac,” he says. “It is built for the Internet.””=

Duke University Health System in Durham, N.C., is currently using eBuilder on the 600,000-sf, $559 million addition to the Duke Medicine Pavilion. The project, which started rolling in 2009, will add 160 critical care ICU stepdown beds and 16 new operating rooms to the pavilion. The addition has been designed to achieve LEED Silver certification.

“We did a one-way integration of all of the financial information for the project from our SAP system into e-Builder,” said Mark Greenspan, director of facility planning, design, and construction at Duke Medical Center. “Our accounting departments tracks overall costs in the SAP system, but our project managers needed that information at a more granular level. It was fairly simple to get that information imported from SAP into e-Builder in the format we could use.”

Another eBuilder project is the Advanced Health Sciences Pavilion at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, an 800,000-sf, $400 million new hospital that is integrating e-Builder's tools with the Solomon accounting system.

Project managers at Cedars-Sinai—which broke ground last summer and is expected to be completed in 2012—use e-Builder to check monthly audit reconciliations, as well as for budgeting, archival processing, and storage of construction documents and meeting minutes.

“We needed our information more directly available to us,” said Robert Cull, executive project director for facilities planning, design and construction at Cedars-Sinai.

Both of these projects are using BIM files cataloged in e-Builder Enterprise. E-Builder supports BIM review by allowing users to work with BIM files without third-party software via an integrated Autodesk Navisworks viewer. You can upload a BIM file into e-Builder published to the .NWD file format, which includes all loaded models, the scene's environment, the current view, and favorite viewpoints, so that you can view the file and its animation without Navisworks or another translator.

“The changes that someone on a project makes cause other changes that we can control and automate with our process and workflow tools, ” Antevy said. “We give our clients the ability to focus on process instead of technology.”

 

Related Stories

Sponsored | | Sep 2, 2014

A smarter way to manage projects

Understanding effective project management helps many big and small organizations to carry out large-scale projects on time, on budget and with lesser commotion.

| Aug 22, 2014

Spireworks app lets users control a piece of the New York skyline

Mark Domino, the son-in-law of developer Douglas Durst, has developed an app, called Spireworks, that allows anyone with a smartphone to change the color of a building's lights.

Sponsored | | Aug 21, 2014

Defining the measure of success when implementing new technologies

Sasha Reed and Chad Dorgan, McCarthy Building Cos.’s Vice President of Quality and Sustainability, discuss the keys to managing innovation within a large construction firm. SPONSORED CONTENT

| Aug 14, 2014

8 do's and don'ts for completing an HVAC life cycle cost assessment

There are many hurdles to overcome when completing a life cycle cost assessment. RMF Engineering’s Seth Spangler offers some words of advice regarding LCCAs.

| Aug 14, 2014

Life cycle cost analysis using energy modeling

A life cycle cost analysis helps a school district decide which HVAC system to use in $198 million worth of future building projects.

Sponsored | | Aug 8, 2014

Setting guidelines for construction PDF documents across the AEC industry

Sasha Reed interviews two members of the coalition responsible for creating new Guidelines for Construction PDF Documents. SPONSORED CONTENT  

| Aug 4, 2014

BIM Giants: Firms enhance BIM/VDC with advanced collaboration tools [2014 Giants 300 Report]

Cloud-based data sharing, rapid iterative design, and cross-discipline collaboration are among the emerging trends in the BIM/VDC field, according to BD+C's 2014 Giants 300 Report.

| Aug 4, 2014

7 habits of highly effective digital enterprises

Transforming your firm into a “digital business” is particularly challenging because digital touches every function while also demanding the rapid development of new skills and investments. SPONSORED CONTENT

| Aug 4, 2014

What AEC executives can do to position their firms for success

Most AEC leadership teams are fastidious about tracking their hit rate–the number of proposals submitted minus the number of proposals won. Here are three alternatives for increasing that percentage. SPONSORED CONTENT

Sponsored | | Jul 30, 2014

How one small architecture firm improved cash flow using ArchiOffice

Foreman Seeley Fountain Architecture not only managed to survive the Great Recession, it has positioned itself to thrive in the economy’s recovery. 

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




Great Solutions

41 Great Solutions for architects, engineers, and contractors

AI ChatBots, ambient computing, floating MRIs, low-carbon cement, sunshine on demand, next-generation top-down construction. These and 35 other innovations make up our 2024 Great Solutions Report, which highlights fresh ideas and innovations from leading architecture, engineering, and construction firms.

halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021