The following is a generalization,
1. A lower Bidding cost due to lack of information will usually result in more change orders and greater cost during construction.
2. A higher cost during bidding due to more complete information in the construction drawings results in less change orders and maintaining the bid cost.
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In scenario 1 the contractor lowballs it because he knows he can make up the profit during construction when it is more difficult or impossible to change contractors or stop the project.
If you want to lower the cost of #2 meet with the contractor after bidding to see were you can lower costs before construction starts.
You are assuming that the bidding price is the final construction price. It is better to compare the percentage of change orders between the projects and check the final cost of the building, as a percentage you want this to be as low as possible and you might be surprised. In scenario #1 you might want to also check the amount of documentation produced during construction to fill in what was not designed and drawn during the preparation of the construction documents. IMO it is more attractive to clients to be able to demonstrate that your estimates and the final cost of construction is within a reasonable number ±5%.
The other error is that you are assuming that the contractor is quoting higher because he thinks the project is more complicated might it not be possible that he is quoting higher because he has all the information he needs?
BTW this is not a BIM vs 2D issue, we used to have this argument at the office I worked pre-computers also.
Eduardo Rolón AIA NCARB
AC27 US/INT -> AC08Macbook Pro M1 Max 64GB ram, OS X 10.XX latest
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