Book description
"The
BIM Handbook
is an extensively researched and meticulously written book, showing
evidence of years of work rather than something that has been quickly
put together in the course of a few months. It brings together most of
the current information about BIM, its history, as well as its potential
future in one convenient place, and can serve as a handy reference book
on BIM for anyone who is involved in the design, construction, and
operation of buildings and needs to know about the technologies that
support it. The need for such a book is indisputable, and it is terrific
that Chuck Eastman and his team were able to step up to the plate and
make it happen. Thanks to their efforts, anyone in the AEC industry
looking for a deeper understanding of BIM now knows exactly where to
look for it."
-AECbytes book review, August 28, 2008 (www. aecbytes.
com/review/2008/BIMHandbook. html)
Discover BIM: A better way to build better buildings
Building Information Modeling (BIM) offers a novel approach to
design, construction, and facility management in which a digital
representation of the building process is used to facilitate the
exchange and interoperability of information in digital format. BIM is
beginning to change the way buildings look, the way they function, and
the ways in which they are designed and built.
The BIM Handbook, Second Edition provides an in-depth
understanding of BIM technologies, the business and organizational
issues associated with its implementation, and the profound advantages
that effective use of BIM can provide to all members of a project
team. Updates to this edition include:
-
Completely updated material covering the current practice and
technology in this fast-moving field
-
Expanded coverage of lean construction and its use of BIM, with
special focus on Integrated Project Delivery throughout the book
-
New insight on the ways BIM facilitates sustainable building
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New information on interoperability schemas and collaboration tools
-
Six new case studies
Painting a colorful and thorough picture of the state of the art in
building information modeling, the BIM Handbook, Second Edition
guides readers to successful implementations, helping them to avoid
needless frustration and costs and take full advantage of this
paradigm-shifting approach to construct better buildings that consume
fewer materials and require less time, labor, and capital resources.
Chuck Eastman is a Professor in the Colleges of
Architecture and Computing at Georgia Institute of Technology,
Atlanta, and Director of the Digital Building Laboratory, a
university-industry consortium, where heleads research in IT in
building design and construction. He has been active in building
modeling research since the 1970s and currently works with a variety
of industry groups developing BIM technology.
Paul Teicholz is Professor Emeritus at Stanford University.
After twenty-five years innovating with IT solutions in the
construction industry, he founded the Center for Integrated Facility
Engineering (CIFE) at Stanford in 1988 and directed that program for
tenyears. He was named the Construction Management "Man of the
Year" by the American Society of Civil Engineers in 1985 and
awarded the Henry C. Turner Prize for Innovation in Construction
Technology by the National Building Museum in 2006.
Rafael Sacks is an Associate Professor in Structural
Engineering and Construction Management at Technion-Israel Institute
of Technology. He founded and leads the Virtual Construction and BIM
Laboratory at the Israel National Building Research Institute, and has
conducted primary and applied BIM research for industry, government,
and public organizations in North America, Europe, and Israel.
Kathleen Liston is CEO of Eco Offsite, a modular construction
company. She co-founded Common Point Technologies, Inc., a
construction simulation software company. She has worked with a
variety of organizations, including Autodesk, Walt Disney, DPR
Construction, and Mortenson Construction, developing technologies and
processes to implement BIM. She has a PhD and master's from Stanford
University in civil and environmental engineering and a bachelor of
architecture from the University of Notre Dame.