I find it kind of funny that many of us old ArchiCADers (as well as our fellow MicroStationers, Reviters, VectorWorksers, and even ADTers) have been creating pretty smart "virtual building" models for the last 15 years, but all of a sudden, nothing seems to live up to expectations. We were pretty happy with the results of our less-capable software before, but now that it does more, and strives to be "True" BIM, we're throwing it off the bridge for it's ineptitudes.
It seems that the only thing that has changed is the perception, not the reality. The recent outburst of BIM debates of the past few years has created new artificial expectations based on a paradigm of theoretical capabilities and wishes for the future. Somehow, simple reviews of actual design products have become fused with discussions of the grand purpose of all design technology, though these forums should clearly be kept separate. The construction industry has become so caught up in what it could be, that it's lost sight of its current assets. We've ceased to see the forest for the trees.
We can still design, visualize, and document buildings better than ever before. The tools improve each year, and provide new opportunities. We have been sharing information for years, and getting projects done. However, we seem obsessed by interoperability, integrated project delivery, model integrity, NURBS modeling, clash detection, rapid prototyping, CNC fabrication, and code, structure, systems, and energy analysis. In this new light, our software is worthless because it can't address these things easily or effectively.
In a baffling reversal of logic, firms are reverting to AutoCAD (or similar Computer-Aided Drafting), after they had already implemented a modeling design platform. I believe the conflicting discourse has frightened firm managers, who are not down in the trenches, into believing that their BIM products are a failure. Without clear feedback from their staff, the media's frenzy of dissecting the challenges and problems of BIM implementation has created a sense of impending crisis, forcing business-minded decision makers to roll up in a ball and go back to what they know. There was never a problem until we started calling our yardstick "BIM", and measuring everything by it.
It is critical that we, as pundits of this industry, be vigilant of our rhetoric to avoid confusing and intertwining these disparate issues. Choose to either A) focus on talking about our real day-to-day issues and how to solve them (perhaps with expectations of the next version or some cool new feature), or B) start a new thread about where we're headed, always in future tense. Feel free to dream of sci-fi solutions where we can mold our very thoughts into a revolving holographic mega-model that automatically writes specifications, eliminates conflicts, complies with codes, and commissions itself to optimal energy efficiency and sustainability standards; but please do not criticize the industry or its tools based on this criteria. We are, after all, still tied inextricably to the bricks-and-mortar world that we create. Evolution will happen in its own time.
Chuck Kottka
Orcutt Winslow
Phoenix, Arizona, USA
ArchiCAD 25 (since 4.5)
Macbook Pro 15" Touchbar OSX 10.15 Core i7 2.9GHz/16GB RAM/Radeon Pro560 4GB