Abstract

In the construction industry, research is being carried out to look for feasible methods and technologies to cut down project costs and waste. Building Information Modelling (BIM) is certainly currently a promising technology/method that can achieve this. The output of the construction industry has a considerable scale; however, the concentration of the industry and the level of informatization are still not high. There is still a large gap in terms of productivity between the construction industry and other industries. Due to the lack of first-hand data regarding how much of an effect can be genuinely had by BIM in real cases, it is unrealistic for construction stakeholders to take the risk of widely adopting BIM. This paper focuses on the methodological quantification (through a case study approach) of BIM's benefits in building construction resource management and real-time costs control, in contrast to traditional non-BIM technologies. Through the use of BIM technology for the dynamic querying and statistical analysis of construction schedules, engineering, resources and costs, the three implementations considered demonstrate how BIM can facilitate the comprehensive grasp of a project's implementation and progress, identify and solve the contradictions and conflicts between construction resources and costs controls, reduce project over-spends and protect the supply of resources.

Highlights

  • Construction costs issues relate to a low-carbon, environmentally-friendly, green building, natural ecologies, social responsibility and welfare [1]

  • The lessons learned from the project ‘Shanghai Disaster Recovery Centre’ provide evidence to support the potential benefits of cost-oriented arrangements of construction activities optimized via Building Information Modelling (BIM)

  • It is believed that BIM can facilitate design and construction phases by involving various stakeholders involved in the construction process via the automated simulation of costactivity information

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Summary

Introduction

Construction costs issues relate to a low-carbon, environmentally-friendly, green building, natural ecologies, social responsibility and welfare [1]. The ultimate objective is to pursue the minimum natural resource consumption per building area and as per the total [2]. As some costs and construction standards are essentially incapable of curtailment or being lowered, the control of costs and waste does not mean squeezing any type of cost blindly; at the very least, it should not be at the price of sacrificing structural safety and weakening social responsibility

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