BIM and the High-Performance Workstation, Part 2 Build back end performance to drive integrated project delivery workflow Brian Haines, industry marketing manager for Building Industry Solutions for Autodesk, says, “The new suite has been created to specifically address CAD and BIM workflows across the building design and construction lifecycle which can help building professionals design, visualize, analyze, document and build more effectively.” Providing all of the tools that building professionals need in a suite can help reduce training time and minimize support headaches for tools and methodologies. It can also, simplify software purchasing and licensing management challenges, allow IT managers to support extended project team members who deal with a proliferation of software packages and diverse file formats. Survival in today’s highly competitive building and construction industry, particularly for small and medium businesses, requires some creative thinking and a bold, comprehensive long-term strategy. Beyond streamlined business and operational systems, firms must find a way compete in a market with fewer project opportunities, lower profit margins and smaller staff. They must also make the shift to more collaborative and integrated project delivery methods, tools and techniques that likely include building information modeling (BIM) and virtual construction processes. Enabling a comprehensive BIM and integrated project delivery workflow demands a comparable hardware implementation strategy that streamlines virtual connections, delivers mobile flexibility, facilitates cloud computing and offers the scalability to grow efficiently and affordably as business opportunities emerge. A successful BIM hardware execution plan that includes the power, flexibility and scalability of desktop and mobile workstations likely begins with the way an AEC firm approaches the virtual building environment, specifically software selection.
Suite Success Today’s BIM solutions require significant processing power, memory and storage with multi-processors, as well as a professional graphics card and network connections. Software developers like Autodesk are moving to more manageable, ITfriendly suite solutions to facilitate complex workflows such as managing a building’s lifecycle from design through construction and continuing into operations. As an example, Autodesk recently introduced its Autodesk Building Design Suite, which combines design, engineering and visualization tools for building for a single price and available on a thumb drive. Built to provide building project teams with tools that address both CAD and BIM workflows, the Building Design Suite provides the flexibility to respond to changing project requirements.
Specifically, the Autodesk Building Design Suite Premium edition is designed for architects and engineers who can benefit from an optimized set of tools including the Autodesk® Revit® family of products (Architecture, Structure and MEP), the AutoCAD family of products (AutoCAD, Architecture, MEP, Structural Detailing), Autodesk® SketchBook® Designer and Autodesk® 3ds Max® Design software and Autodesk Showcase.
“The biggest factor in hardware selection is likely the size of the models a firm expects to develop. Megabytes of BIM files directly impact RAM requirements.” — Mano Gialusis, senior product marketing manager for Dell
The Ultimate edition includes the products above as well as Autodesk ® Navisworks® Manage, Autodesk ® Quantity Takeoff, Autodesk ® Inventor ® and Autodesk ® Building Design Suite Premium. Autodesk system recommendations for the Premium integrated suite of products includes: Windows 7 on a 64-bit Quad Core CPU (such as a 3.0 GHz or Higher Intel® Pentium® 4 or AMD Athlon Dual Core with SSE2 technology), 8GB of RAM, a display adapter capable of 24-bit color and 256 MB DirectX® 10 capable graphics card with Shader Model 3. The system should also have 22 GB of free space. Mano Gialusis, senior product marketing manager with Dell, says, “Remember, these recommendations are just to run the applications at optimal performance. The biggest factor in hardware selection is likely the size of the models a firm expects to develop. Megabytes of BIM file size directly impact RAM requirements.”