|
AECbytes Newsletter #5 (February 5,
2004) What's in a Name? The BIM Acronym
In Cadence AEC Tech News #108
on the AIA-TAP conference, I described
how several presenters and attendees
at the conference expressed their
intense dislike of the acronym BIM
(Building Information Modeling) for
describing the model-based approach
to building representation. In that
article and in AECbytes Newsletter
#4,
I invited readers to share their views
on the BIM Acronym, and if
they didn't like it, to suggest more
appropriate and better-sounding alternatives.
I would like to thank all those who
responded to my invitation. While
it is impossible to list all the responses
I received, a select few reflecting
diverse viewpoints are presented here,
along with my own thoughts on this
issue.
What's Wrong with CAD?
Some readers wrote in to express
their preference for the term CAD
and did not think a change was needed,
as evidenced by these responses:
- "If you think that BIM will replace
CAD then I would suggest that the
technology behind CAD is simply
expanding and that what we are doing
is still CAD. So let's stick with
a term we all understand, Computer
Aided Design." -- John S. Rogers,
Architect
- "BIM (Building Information Modeling)
is just another term for part of
what people who are seriously engaged
in architectural CAD (Computer Aided
Design) have discussed for four
decades. The vendors are still attempting
to catch up with ideas that were
generated decades ago. In their
inability to do so successfully,
they changed the terminology from
CAD--which is about design--to BIM--which
is not about design. Sure, design
may not be the largest part of building
industry activities, but it is the
source of it. If BIM is about modeling
what has been designed already or
is there already, then it remains
to be about documenting rather than
creating. The earlier re-definition
of CAD as Computer Aided Drafting
attempted to convince us that CAD
had been delivered to us. For a
couple of decades, CAD tools were
pretty much confined to that disappointing
two dimensional and uncreative paradigm.
Three dimensions and supposed creativity
were the realm of '3D modeling'
tools.
Even as the paradigm formally shifts
into three dimensions with the concept
of BIM, which is the only redeeming
value of this changed terminology,
the underlying concept of documentation
rather than formation of ideas remains,
in my opinion, unappealing to the
architectural profession. At least
at the technologically leading edge,
architects want to be able to design
aided by computers. In the design
activity, data is generated that
needs to be an integral part of
the data life cycle. The design
activity generates more value on
the project with less effort than
any later phases. If we shift from
dumb electronic 2D documentation
to somewhat more intelligent--or
informative--electronic 3D documentation,
we still do not achieve Computer
Aided Design. With 'BIM' we implicitly
remove the demand for design tools
from our CAD vendors. They could
not deliver CAD to us, but maybe
they will be able to deliver BIM.
Once we get an intelligent data
model, we will hopefully revisit
CAD in order to allow us to finally
design that model in the first place!"
-- Volker Mueller, Design Technology
Manager, NBBJ
Readers Suggest Alternatives to
BIM
Several readers expressed their dislike
of the term BIM and sent in their
suggestions for more appropriate and
better-sounding acronyms:
- "I prefer any of the following:
Building Lifecycle Modeling, Building
Simulation Modeling, Virtual Building,
Digital Building Modeling, Digital
Building Simulation. 'Building Information
Modeling' is wrong because we're
not modeling information, we're
modeling a building and all of its
systems. By the way, I don't think
there is any single product on the
market that 'is' BIM yet. More important
than the name itself would be a
precise definition of what it is,
so that it is more useful than a
marketing buzzword." -- Jonathan
Cohen, Architect and IT Consultant
- "I, like the others you have mentioned,
hate the BIM Acronym. I know
this is shallow, but maybe at the
core of my dislike is something
as simple as the ring of it. BIM
just sounds stupid. These are my
suggested alternatives: VCM--Virtual
Construction Modeling, or CDM--Construction
Design Modeling. " -- Ronald
A. Powell, CAD Technician
- "Just as CAAD was an awful and
confusing term (already confused
with CAD and CADD) that has faded
now into non-use everywhere but
Europe, in preference to the far
more clear and descriptive term
'architectural CADD,' I believe
that BIM, similarly, must fade away
in favor of what it really is: 'virtual
building.' Unfortunately, the various
software developers that create
architectural CADD software shy
away from the term partly because
Graphisoft apparently put a copyright
on it long ago. However, the alternative
terms--smart buildings, parametric
modelers, database/systems driven
CADD--and others I have heard all
create even more confusion, as such
terms already refer to other things
as well, and a real term is better
than yet another acronym. Graphisoft
should be encouraged to give up
their proprietary rights to the
term--acknowledge that they now
have colleagues developing in the
area--and let the whole new genre
be known properly as virtual building."
-- Geoffrey Moore Langdon, Architectural
CADD Consultants
- "I don't necessarily care for
the 'BIM' term. But after trying
a few out for myself, I realized
it wasn't that easy to come up with
a catchy acronym. Nonetheless, here
are a few that I came up with in
the remainder of my lunch hour.
Augmented Data Structure ADS
Augmented Data Entity ADE
Augmented Data Building Entity ADBE
Intelligent Building Model IBM
Intelligent Structure Model ISM
Intelligent Structures Initiative
ISI
Intelligent Architectural Model
IAM
Intelligent Data Entity IDE
Intelligently Augmented Building
IAD
Intelligently Augmented Model IAM
Intelligently Augmented Building
Model IABM
Simulated Intelligent Building Model
SIBM
Building Digital Model BDM
Digital Building Model DBM
Intelligent Digital Building Model
IDBM
Intelligent Building Representation
IBR
Building Augmented Model BAM
Data Augmented Model DAM
Building Data Augmented Model BDAM
Building Augmented Data Model BADM
Intelligently Augmented Building
Model IABM
Intelligently Modeled Building IMB
Building with Augmented Data Structure
BADS
Building with Intelligent Data Structure
BIDS" -- Jim Cope, Senior CAD
Administrator
Analysis
While I agree with the readers who
pointed out that the information modeling
approach to building design still
falls under the broad scope of computer-aided
design (CAD), so a new term is not
needed, I also think that the term
CAD is too generic. Many of the other
industries using CAD have come up
with alternative acronyms to it that
are specific to their industry. A
good example is Electronic Design
Automation, or EDA, which refers to
CAD for the computer chip design industry.
The mechanical engineering industry
refers to their CAD tools and processes
as MCAD. It would be useful, therefore,
for the building industry to have
a specialized acronym for its CAD.
Also, because the building industry
has been slow to move into the 3D
model-based approach, the term CAD
will always be synonymous with 2D
drafting to many in the industry despite
the fact that it actually stands for
computer-aided design, not computer-aided
drafting.
And finally, I think a new term is
needed because the technology underlying
traditional CAD applications is very
different from the technology underlying
building-specific modeling applications.
As I pointed out in Cadence AEC Tech
News #90,
the data model of general-purpose
CAD applications deals primarily with
geometric entities (points, lines,
planes, and so on), while the data
model of building modeling applications
deals primarily with building entities
(walls, doors, slabs, and so on).
A new term is needed to refer to the
latter category of applications, and
the initial label of "3D, object-oriented,
AEC-specific CAD" is too long-winded.
With regard to a new term to replace
CAD, no readers wrote in to defend
the term BIM, suggesting that it is
not wildly popular. While it is great
that all the vendors, at least, have
agreed upon the use of the term, it
is unfortunate that so many professionals
in the AEC industry find it unappealing.
Personally, I like the phrase 'building
information modeling,' as I think
it appropriately describes a representation
that captures building data and not
just geometric data. But the translation
of this phrase into the acronym BIM
is not as great. Like CAD, BIM is
easy to say, and I prefer to call
it "Bim" rather than "B.I.M." (each
letter read separately) as I have
heard many people do to avoid saying
"Bim." But BIM doesn't sound half
as elegant and professional as CAD,
in my opinion.
With regard to the suggested alternatives,
I have to agree with the reader who
realized that it is tough to find
a good acronym. Many of the suggested
alternatives, say Digital Building
Model (DBM) that was a suggestion
common to two readers, sound fine
as an entire phrase, but don't make
for a great acronym. I think an acronym
with a vowel between two consonants,
like CAD and BIM, is easier to say
and we need one like that. This rules
out many suggestions such as BLM,
DBS, IMB, VCM, CDM, and so on. Graphisoft's
"virtual building" is nice, as a reader
pointed out, but it doesn't reflect
a process like CAD or BIM does. I
did my share of pondering on alternatives,
but couldn't come up with anything
that's as easy to say, and at the
same time so apt, as CAD.
In conclusion, my prognosis is that
the acronym BIM is here to stay, simply
for the lack of something better.
None of this, however, should detract
from the potential of BIM-based technologies
and processes to radically improve
the state of the art in the building
industry. If a rose would smell as
sweet by any other name, as Shakespeare
put it, then BIM represents a more
intelligent and effective way of designing,
building, and operating buildings,
whatever it may be called.
About the Author
Lachmi Khemlani is founder and editor of AECbytes. She has a Ph.D. in Architecture from UC Berkeley, specializing in intelligent building modeling, and consults and writes on AEC technology. She can be reached at lachmi@aecbytes.com.
If you found this article useful and have not yet subscribed to AECbytes, please consider doing so. Subscription is free, and more subscribers will allow this publication to provide more of such content to you.
Newsletters > Issue #5 > Printer-friendly format |