Standard content for Members only
To continue reading this article, please login to your Utility Week account, Start 14 day trial or Become a member.
If your organisation already has a corporate membership and you haven’t activated it simply follow the register link below. Check here.
“Utilities use Bim for project management, but it can also be used to effectively engage with local communities.”
For utility companies around the world, managing engagement with the communities their infrastructure is embedded within can be a tricky business. However, advances in technologies that are common in other industries could provide more transparency and create a smoother two-way conversation between utilities and the public.
Utilities are no strangers to building information modelling (Bim). Its use for the efficient design and delivery of power plants, water treatment works, substations, transmission corridors and distribution networks is common practice. But beyond the obvious benefits of improved cost, programme and quality performance, utilities could learn from other sectors in using Bim technologies to engage communities.
The traditional consultation process, and its reliance on 2D plans and copious volumes of documents, can often struggle to convey a project’s impact. The cycles of modifying designs and creating new sets of deliverables to accommodate required changes can also be laborious.
Far better to bring a proposal to life through the use of a 3D model, which can be explored by all.
Enhance that model through the use of reality capture technology to show the project in the context of its real-world surroundings in a photorealistic way, which can convey the intent of a design, and identify residents’ concerns and the consultation process becomes more engaging, exciting and quick. It’s an approach gaining ground across multiple infrastructure sectors, particularly in the context of densely populated urban environments.
New projects are just one side of the coin. Undertaking maintenance and upgrades to in-situ distribution networks, though often smaller in scale, are often perceived as equally disruptive. It’s here that utility companies are exploring combining multiple data sets with 3D models.
Electromagnetic and ground penetrating radar scans enable an accurate representation of what’s under the surface before committing to dig. Closing the loop on project delivery by linking schedules to a Bim model can help accommodate residents’ wishes for movement of plant and the impact of site logistics.
Less disruption to daily lives, from greater transparency, insight and engagement – the potential for BIM to help improve community engagement is clear.
Dominic Thasarathar, senior manager – construction, utilities, natural resources, Autodesk
Please login or Register to leave a comment.