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Introduction
- Research suggests that a major cause of cost overrun
in construction is late change introduced by clients
who hadn't really understood what the architect's sketches
meant. Even "professional clients" who build
regularly and have an established method of communicating
their requirements experience difficulties. They want
to encourage the designers and constructors to innovate
and explore new ways of delivering an optimum building
but they need to ensure the resultant building will
effectively support the activities they want to carry
out in that facility.
In some areas,
the industry has attempted to solve this using Virtual
Reality but the fundamental problem remains - how can
the client and designer agree a design specification
that gives the designer freedom to innovate yet protect
against a building being created that is not "fit
for purpose".
The clients'
need is communicated in a "brief" which should
contain everything the designers need to know about
the facility the client needs; effectively a detailed
description of what the client requires in space, spatial
relationships, finishes, environmental standards, fixtures
and fittings, layout, financial and durability performance.
It is an abstract representation of the facility design.
The current methods used with industry are time and
paper intensive resulting in delays and even inaccuracy.
At the simplest level, Scheme briefs consist of a schedule
of accommodation and a detailed definition for the space
type (Room Data Sheet).
Development of the schedule of accommodation
for each scheme will vary. The detailed spatial type
definitions (Functional Space Definitions) are more
complex to design manually but can be more standard
for space provision.
Activity-based
Design - activeplan is a database-driven application
that allows regular changes in equipment, furniture,
or personnel from a range of other software applications
to generate a new layout of an existing building. Spaces
and equipment can be intelligent objects that know what
they are and where they are in 3D space but as well
as these physical attributes, they have logical attributes.
This allows us, for example, to know not just that a
desk is located in a room but also who sits at that
desk, what they do and how they are performing in that
role (assuming there is some means of measurement).
The growth in PFI/PPP
and the need to ensure a finished building is truly
"fit for purpose" has led to these tools being
used in a new way i.e. to design a facility, room or
building around the activities that will be carried
out there and the functional spaces/equipment required
to support those activities. Layouts will be generated
automatically from the database, allowing the client
and designers to explore alternatives in a multi-user
web-based environment and see the effect of their changes.
Fit for purpose- proposed layouts can be automatically
tested to ensure the planned activities have sufficient
space and the required equipment to support their procedures.
Where an agreed output specification exists, perhaps
in the form of room data sheets, ActivePlan replaces
the current process of manually checking drawings against
the room data sheets, producing an automated "gap
analysis" report that highlights any variation,
thereby allowing innovation to be properly considered
without costly oversights being made.
This helps the designer to communicate more effectively
with the client and, because it is web-based, all relevant
parties can be included in the decisions taken, reducing
last minute changes.
Every iteration of the design is version controlled
and, when published to the master project, onwardly
version controlled, even recording when a specified
piece of equipment changes and generating detailed materials
and equipment lists for procurement, if required.
activeplan can generate models of functional areas (in
2D and 3D) from a rules-based database that can include
the experience from previous projects and has an interface
that allows the occupier of the planned space to set
down what activities they will need to undertake, visualise
the functional spaces and equipment the designer perceives
they will need and collaborate in refining that to meet
budgetary, operational and health and safety constraints.
An entire building could be generated automatically
at a very early stage and used as an interactive model
to ensure everyone understands what is to be built and
to reflect any required changes. Such changes can be
applied globally allowing the designers to test alternative
options, settle on the optimum and update the entire
project with a specification change.
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Cost Modelling
- Elemental costs can be combined with costs related
to spaces and work activities to create a more meaningful
information set that can be analysed at the earliest
stages, before the design is underway.
A simple graphical tool allows the functional spaces
defined in the schedule of accommodation to be laid
out on a virtual site plan and immediately costed. The
spaces can be moved around to ensure the facility is
functionally viable and re-costed automatically again
and again.
Where the client has not yet committed to invest in
a detailed design, this approach help the team arrive
at a more reliable GMP without a major investment in
potentially abortive design.
O&M and
FM - Because the collaborative web environment
encourages the team to update the room data sheets as
information comes available, the as-built information
is more accurate and can populate O&M, H&S and
FM applications including the maintenance regimes.
Although activeplan is a very advanced FM application,
it is specifically designed to work with other FM, maintenance,
estates or building management systems.
Audit &
Measurement - As the project continues, the briefing
system version control can be employed to ensure that
changes are workflow-approved and the implications are
managed. This means that it becomes a reliable source
of information to test delivery against resulting in
faster sign-off saving time and money and reducing risk
for all parties.
At project completion the brief is then available as
the functional space standard against which spatial
operational changes can be assessed and, for the first
time, provide an objective and auditable measure of
"best value".
The brief invariably changes through
the design and construction stages and activeplan scheme
briefing can be used as the conduit to communicate change,
to test the designer's interpretation to ensure that
the brief is being properly complied with and flag up
the likely cost implications. Where the design varies
from the brief, perhaps for good reason, that variance
can be communicated with appropriate justification,
if necessary.
This provides clients within a PFI/PPP relationship
with the means to audit the solutions a consortium provides,
both at design/construction phase but also during operation
and through to disposal.
Where the client has an existing portfolio,
activeplan can be used to analyse floor plans and create
a schedule of functional areas and any equipment they
contain, creating room data sheets if required. If the
client has information about the productivity of a particular
facility, this can be used to compare the impact of
various layouts and ensure the brief matches operational
needs.
Where a programme of work is being considered, a survey
comparing what exists against the benchmark in the form
of a "Gap Analysis" can contribute to the
production of a strategic plan for longer-term portfolio
investment that encompasses disability accessibility,
for example.
Durability
and Whole Life - activeplan has a partnership
with Building Performance Group, a world-leader in life
cycle and their data can be applied to materials, equipment
and areas for analysis purposes.
Because the materials and products are driven from the
database, a change to a floor finish in a functional
area, for example, can generate a revised building model
that reflects that option and can generate a report
outlining the overall cost implications. In addition,
because the model now differentiates between the activities
each functional areas support, the cost model can reflect
the fact that a carpet in a busy corridor will wear
more quickly that the same carpet in meeting room.
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