Page 95 - DCAP404 _Object Oriented Programming
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Object-oriented Programming




                    Notes
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                                     Caselet     Change your Design, Midway

                                           hanges happen all the time in a building project - the client asks for changes, the
                                           consultant asks for changes, you consider changes as you move the project through
                                     Cits later stages... there is no end to it. This could have been a mind-boggling issue
                                     some years ago, but may not be any more.
                                     In the early 80s, when architects started using Computer-Assisted Drawing (CAD), the
                                     traditional layer-drafting technique was easily adapted to the layer-based CAD systems
                                     of the day. Within a few years, most construction documents and shop drawings were
                                     plotted from computers.

                                     The use of CAD files was evolving towards communicating information about a building
                                     in ways that a plotted drawing could not. Forward thinking design firms adopted these
                                     tools, realising that the data in the object-oriented CAD files, if carefully structured and
                                     managed, could be used to automate certain documentation tasks.
                                     But, object-oriented CAD systems remained rooted to building graphics, which were built
                                     on graphics-based CAD foundations. This resulted in the system not being optimised for
                                     creating and managing information about a building.

                                     Another generation of purpose-built software solutions was required - a software that
                                     was both information-centric and provided building information modelling  in place of
                                     building graphic modelling.
                                     Architects, for instance, work on the information using the conventional graphic language
                                     of building design (such as plan, section and elevation), entering and reviewing information
                                     in a format that looks just like the architectural drawings they have worked with, for
                                     years. The fact remains that these people work  on the  building information  through
                                     drawing rather than working directly on a drawing in the computer.
                                     There was a need for a powerful building design and documentation systems for architects,
                                     interior designers, design-build teams and other building industry professionals.
                                     Autodesk Inc, in the building design space, has introduced what  it calls revolutionary
                                     software - Autodesk Revit - the parametric building modeller that is expected to capture
                                     all information about the design, even while the work is on.
                                     How is Revit different from the AutoCAD software?
                                     Imagine you are halfway through construction documents. You see a change that would
                                     make the project look even better. The Autodesk Revit parametric change engine, Autodesk
                                     sources say, will automatically coordinate the changes made anywhere - in model views
                                     or drawing sheets, schedules, sections, plans... . You name it. ‘This engine supports all
                                     phases of the building process, preserving all information from beginning to end’, say the
                                     sources.
                                     This change management is said to be one of the fundamental characteristics of a building
                                     information modelling solution.
                                     Because the coordination is assured by the system, embarrassing errors are minimised,
                                     and there’s savings in time and needless costs in trying to hunt down the source and fix the
                                     problem.
                                                                                                         Contd...




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