Abstract

Digital twins have raised the attention of practitioners in the fields of Architecture, Engineering and Construction, and Facilities Management (AEC/FM). The term broadly refers to the cyber part of cyber-physical systems used for representing and managing real-world assets. This qualitative study explores how Finnish AEC/FM practitioners describe digital twins of assets in the built environment. Our findings are primarily derived from the interpretive analysis of semi-structured interviews with project managers and C-level executives during 2018 and 2019. The results of this analysis are discussed within the existing literature about digital twins, complex software ecosystems, and Service-Dominant (S-D) logic. We observed that digital twins were often explained using simple metaphors that could be easily understood by practitioners. We identified seven of such metaphors, each associated with a key attribute of digital twins. We argue that digital twins are the basis of complex software ecosystems, resulting from the increased expectations of AEC/FM stakeholders about the role of Building Information Modeling and other software solutions in their daily operations. Under an S-D logic perspective, digital twins are a resource applied by multiple interdependent actors to integrate information, co-create value for their entire network, and jointly deliver new products or services.

Highlights

  • The Architecture, Engineering and Construction, and Facilities Management (AEC/FM) industry is complex and fragmented

  • Building Information Modeling (BIM) is considered a different paradigm and evolutionary step over previous Computer-Aided Design (CAD) technologies, because it allows to specify objects and connections between objects using structured interoperable schemas [2], it can be used for construction projects of different sizes as well as for individual project components [8], and facilitates the information exchange between stakeholders involved in different phases or sub-phases of such projects [9]

  • We argue that digital twins are complex software ecosystems that emerge from the increased expectations that AEC/FM stakeholders place upon BIM and other related technologies

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Summary

Introduction

The Architecture, Engineering and Construction, and Facilities Management (AEC/FM) industry is complex and fragmented. The variety of actors involved across the long and unpredictable lifecycles of assets in the built environment (e.g., buildings or urban infrastructure) add further complexity to the exchange of information across organizational boundaries. BIM is considered a different paradigm and evolutionary step over previous Computer-Aided Design (CAD) technologies, because it allows to specify objects and connections between objects using structured interoperable schemas [2], it can be used for construction projects of different sizes as well as for individual project components [8], and facilitates the information exchange between stakeholders involved in different phases or sub-phases of such projects [9]

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