Yes, there are inefficiency traps associated with BIM but the problem may be broader and deeper than you think and extend to your specifications, contracts, drawings, staff, clients and contractors.
The BIM Revolution / Solution may be triggering a cascading series of unintended, seemingly minor consequences, that are concentrating in your bottom line.
Given the technological advances I'm seeing on the horizon it’s only going to get worse and the problem isn't just related to BIM. It's much more pervasive, resulting in massive inefficiencies.
If you are seeing red then you should probably take a hard look at the problems BIM is creating in all of those categories. My list is rapidly growing and the solutions I'm seeing may provide a roadmap to retooling the architectural practice.
One thing is for sure BIM has had both positive and negative affects that are changing the practice.
Time to evolve or go extinct.
The BIM Revolution / Solution may be triggering a cascading series of unintended, seemingly minor consequences, that are concentrating in your bottom line.
Given the technological advances I'm seeing on the horizon it’s only going to get worse and the problem isn't just related to BIM. It's much more pervasive, resulting in massive inefficiencies.
If you are seeing red then you should probably take a hard look at the problems BIM is creating in all of those categories. My list is rapidly growing and the solutions I'm seeing may provide a roadmap to retooling the architectural practice.
One thing is for sure BIM has had both positive and negative affects that are changing the practice.
Time to evolve or go extinct.