flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Electronic surveying improves accuracy on BIM-driven hospital project

Electronic surveying improves accuracy on BIM-driven hospital project

A mechanical contractor combines an electronic surveying tool with a BIM model to make significant productivity gains in a large-scale hospital project.


By By Robert Cassidy, Editorial Director | February 3, 2013
Workers at Southland Industries 80,000-sf prefabrication plant in Garden Grove,
Workers at Southland Industries 80,000-sf prefabrication plant in Garden Grove, Calif., put the finishing touches on a plumbing
This article first appeared in the BD+C February 2013 issue of BD+C.

In the rapidly changing world of virtual design and construction, the mechanical-electrical-plumbing component of building information modeling has earned a reputation as something of a technology laggard. BIM for structural work? Beautiful. For architectural design? Lovely. For general construction? Terrif’. But BIM for MEP? Not so hot.

That negative perception is changing, as MEP engineers find new ways to put BIM to more effective use in their work—which, in the case of a complex project like a hospital, can account for 30-40% of total construction costs.

Southland Industries, Garden Grove, Calif., is one such innovator. The design-build mechanical contractor is applying electronic surveying technology to BIM and 3D models to enhance the accuracy and reliability of  prefabricated HVAC and plumbing systems. In so doing, it is saving time and money on complex hospital projects while improving quality.

Forging a unified Building Team

Three years ago, a major client commissioned Southland and its partners to design-build a complex of three facilities totaling more than a half-million square feet—a multi-story patient tower with a diagnostic/treatment center, a health services building, and a central utility plant.

The Building Team—which in addition to Southland included HMC Architects (architect), Ted Jacob Engineering Group (M/E OR and electrical COR), Sasco Electric (design-assist electrical contractor), Berger Bros. (exterior framing), Sharpe Interior Systems (interior framing), and McCarthy Building Cos. (GC)—had worked together successfully on a previous job for this healthcare provider. The client wanted to keep the same team and bring them together early in the design process, a practice that had not been followed in the earlier project.

Southland’s role was to provide design-assist mechanical/plumbing services. According to Patrick Reed, Contract Executive in the firm’s healthcare division, the company grasped the opportunity to make better use of the available BIM/3D documents to improve its prefabrication of mechanical and plumbing systems.

Southland had been prefabbing piping and sheet metal in its 80,000-sf shop in Garden Grove, Calif., for decades. For the new project, Reed and his team planned to apply electronic surveying technology normally used for exterior applications—in this case, Trimble Total Station RTS-555, with AutoCAD CADMEP+ solution software—to the BIM models of the interior HVAC and plumbing systems.

“Our Northern California office had used a system like this in previous projects,” says Reed. For the new project, the goal was to take the data from the BIM model and prefab the mechanical and plumbing systems in whole assemblies—for 100% of the job.

“You can run into problems because the documents don’t match what’s out in the field,” says Reed. The surveying system would, it was hoped, provide the accuracy needed to make sure all the prefabbed pieces fit together perfectly at the site.

Dialing down the tolerances

Linking the interior survey to the BIM model proved an enormous time saver for prefabbing and installing such components as piping insert hangers, seismic inserts, and sleeves. “We had not preassembled our hangers before,” says Reed. Instead, hangers would be delivered to the field and cut on site. “The Trimble system allowed us to set a zero point on the metal deck so that we could prefab hangers to a half-inch accuracy in height,” he says.

The system also provided a level of accuracy of plus or minus one-eighth of an inch, versus a quarter-inch industry standard. “We had a reproducibility that allowed us to use 98-99% of the inserts and prefabricated hangers, compared to about 85% in previous jobs,” says Reed. “Three-D coordination allowed that level of reproducibility.”

Plumbing and pipefitting installation was vastly improved. Instead of having crews of five or six using string and tape to measure and lay out mechanical system inserts, Southland was able to use two-person crews to do the same job more accurately, using the electronic survey equipment. “It took about two weeks of training to learn how to use the device and the methodology,” recalls Reed. “After becoming proficient with the device, their productivity excelled.”

That training paid off in a 50% time savings for making these measurements. “A building on the scale we were working on would have 10,000 to 15,000 data points,” says Reed. “We were hitting 800 or 900 points per deck per day. We could lay out a 25,000-sf floor plate in three or four days with a two-man crew. That would take a typical crew of six a week to perform the same task.” Even more important, says Reed, “Our accuracy was 99% in the field.”

The Southland team took that expertise and applied it to mechanical system penetrations through framed walls. “In the past, we’d use tape and string,” says Reed. “With Trimble, we’d go out with the model and make the measurements. Trimble was much more accurate, and this cut down problems with the drywall framer,” Sharpe Interior Systems.

Improving logistical flow on the job

Combining the interior survey with the BIM model produced other benefits as well. “To us, prefab is more than just cutting pipe to length and welding it in the shop, or assembling ductwork in the shop,” says Reed. “Now, it’s taking the information from the BIM model so that we have right-size batching of whole sections—preassembled, presoldered, prebraced—to ship to the site.” Reed says his team learned a lot about logistics,  just-in-time workflow, and right-size batching—packaging, documenting, and numbering all the parts and pieces in the floor plan.
And because Southland was able to get its work done more quickly, the contractor could move along faster, too. “McCarthy could pour a deck every three or four days,” says Reed.

However, Reed acknowledges that melding the electronic survey data into the BIM model did not always work perfectly. “In some cases we had limitations when the files were too large,” he says. He cautions that electronic surveying for interior measurements works best for large-scale projects with repetitive floor plans—a high-rise hotel, for example.

Reed’s team also found that its original system for numbering and ordering hangers didn’t work in the field and had to be changed midstream. Shipping preassembled trapeze hangers with the rods already installed also proved overly cumbersome. Instead, they taped the struts and other pieces to the rods and had crews put them together in the field. “That solution sounds counterintuitive, but it was 15% faster to do it that way,” says Reed.

But there’s no thought of going back to the old stick-and-tape ways of measuring interiors. Southland has adopted a standard of prefabricating 100% of all hangers for major new construction work. “The Trimble system’s accuracy eliminates a lot of human error,” says Reed. “It’s enabling us to take our prefab capability to the next level, to plan further in advance without having to do rework in the field.”

Related Stories

Government Buildings | May 10, 2024

New federal buildings must be all-electric by 2030

A new Biden Administration rule bans the use of fossil fuels in new federal buildings beginning in 2030. The announcement came despite longstanding opposition to the rule by the natural gas industry. 

Sustainable Development | May 10, 2024

Nature as the city: Why it’s time for a new framework to guide development

NBBJ leaders Jonathan Ward and Margaret Montgomery explore five inspirational ideas they are actively integrating into projects to ensure more healthy, natural cities.

Mass Timber | May 8, 2024

Portland's Timberview VIII mass timber multifamily development will offer more than 100 affordable units

An eight-story, 72,000-sf mass timber apartment building in Portland, Ore., topped out this winter and will soon offer over 100 affordable units. The structure is the tallest affordable housing mass timber building and the first Type IV-C affordable housing building in the city. 

Architects | May 8, 2024

Ivan O’Garro, AIA joins LEO A DALY as a vice president

Integrated design firm LEO A DALY welcomes Ivan O’Garro, AIA, as a vice president and managing principal of its Atlanta studio.

K-12 Schools | May 7, 2024

World's first K-12 school to achieve both LEED for Schools Platinum and WELL Platinum

A new K-12 school in Washington, D.C., is the first school in the world to achieve both LEED for Schools Platinum and WELL Platinum, according to its architect, Perkins Eastman. The John Lewis Elementary School is also the first school in the District of Columbia designed to achieve net-zero energy (NZE). 

Healthcare Facilities | May 6, 2024

Hospital construction costs for 2024

Data from Gordian breaks down the average cost per square foot for a three-story hospital across 10 U.S. cities.

Biophilic Design | May 6, 2024

The benefits of biophilic design in the built environment

Biophilic design in the built environment supports the health and wellbeing of individuals, as they spend most of their time indoors.

MFPRO+ Special Reports | May 6, 2024

Top 10 trends in affordable housing

Among affordable housing developers today, there’s one commonality tying projects together: uncertainty. AEC firms share their latest insights and philosophies on the future of affordable housing in BD+C's 2023 Multifamily Annual Report.

Retail Centers | May 3, 2024

Outside Las Vegas, two unused office buildings will be turned into an open-air retail development

In Henderson, Nev., a city roughly 15 miles southeast of Las Vegas, 100,000 sf of unused office space will be turned into an open-air retail development called The Cliff. The $30 million adaptive reuse development will convert the site’s two office buildings into a destination for retail stores, chef-driven restaurants, and community entertainment.

Codes and Standards | May 3, 2024

New York City considering bill to prevent building collapses

The New York City Council is considering a proposed law with the goal of preventing building collapses. The Billingsley Structural Integrity Act is a response to the collapse of 1915 Billingsley Terrace in the Bronx last December. 

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category


Urban Planning

Bridging the gap: How early architect involvement can revolutionize a city’s capital improvement plans

Capital Improvement Plans (CIPs) typically span three to five years and outline future city projects and their costs. While they set the stage, the design and construction of these projects often extend beyond the CIP window, leading to a disconnect between the initial budget and evolving project scope. This can result in financial shortfalls, forcing cities to cut back on critical project features.



Libraries

Reasons to reinvent the Midcentury academic library

DLR Group's Interior Design Leader Gretchen Holy, Assoc. IIDA, shares the idea that a designer's responsibility to embrace a library’s history, respect its past, and create an environment that will serve student populations for the next 100 years.

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