2007-05-11 02:42 PM - last edited on 2023-05-25 06:19 PM by Rubia Torres
2007-05-11 04:39 PM
2007-05-11 05:23 PM
Chazz wrote:
Autocad will be dominant for a long time to come but any firm worth working for will see that that BIM is the future. There are undeniable opportunities for candidates who can lead firms in the BIM direction, regardless the package.
2007-05-11 08:04 PM
2007-05-11 09:00 PM
2007-05-11 09:21 PM
Chazz wrote:I know of 2 medium/large (30-60 staff) architecture firms in Denver (of course, there could be more) who have implemented Revit (i.e. are moving away from AutoCAD) -- and I know of maybe a dozen who are "using" Revit (i.e. playing with it, not sure of this whole "BIM thing", got the software for free when they upgraded AutoCAD). The major structural firms are working with Revit, but I hear a lot of frustrations with the software from that sector, and I believe they use it for modeling and calculations, but still resort to AutoCAD for documentation.
Interesting.
Laura, I notice you're in Denver --where I see Revit is beating ArchiCAD 13 to 1 in the CraigsList hiring game. Ouch!
2007-05-11 10:32 PM
Richard wrote:It's also true that many of the ads are from for Struct or MEP houses rather than architecture firms.
If you actually read the content of the listings...you get the sense that Revit might be used for 3D, but not as the main production engine...
2007-05-11 11:27 PM
Chazz wrote:
It's not about now, it's about 5 years from now. If all these places are experimenting with Revit or deploying it in phases, it is only a question of time before it becomes their dominant tool and the market leader. As the struct and MEP guys get into BIM there will be pressures on the the architects to do the same and visa-versa. It's a brilliant, viral feedback loop.
Chazz wrote:
It would be one thing if ArchiCAD was a clearly superior product (it's not)...
2007-05-12 12:04 AM
Laura wrote:Agreed. However, this is only a _now_ argument. We must remember that 5-7 years ago there was simply nothing on the landscape that could compete with ArchiCAD. That lead and advantage has been completely squandered with timid half-step upgrades such as AC9 & 11 or complete acid-party abortions like AC 8. What is left is a mishmash of creaky legacy code on top of more modern, but still visionless, work. It's a disaster. 5 years from now Revit will be Autodesks InDesign while Archicad will be the occasionally-used, mostly forgotten QuarkXPress.
OK, maybe not "clearly" superior, but superior none-the-less.
2007-05-12 12:36 AM
Chazz wrote:
........ As the struct and MEP guys get into BIM there will be pressures on the the architects to do the same and visa-versa. It's a brilliant, viral feedback loop.