|
|
AECbytes Product Review (August
30, 2007)
Newforma Project Center
Product Summary
Newforma
Project Center is a project information
management and collaboration application targeted
towards architecture and engineering firms.
It organizes project information, facilitates
information exchange, and streamlines project
processes.
Pros: Automatic
indexing and categorization of all project information
so that it can be easily accessed, managed,
and searched, without the need to move files
or add tags to them; plug-ins to Microsoft Outlook
allow both incoming and outgoing emails to be
quickly saved with their respective projects;
built-in Viewer for marking up drawings and
snapshots of 3D models and sending them as PDFs
to external members with an option to log a
transmittal; powerful search capabilities including
the ability to find object data in CAD files;
dedicated interfaces for managing document sets,
submittals, and transmittals and for managing
and tracking issues to resolution; dedicated
Info Exchange server allows project-related
information to be exchanged with external team
members easily and securely.
Cons:
Help documentation has an over-abundance of
text and very few illustrations, providing a
poor learning supplement to the training sessions
provided during initial deployment and upgrades;
Viewer does not directly support 3D files, which
are becoming an important part of the AEC workflow;
email integration is limited to Microsoft Outlook
and does not extend to other email applications.
Price: Available
for license on an annual subscription fee basis
in two modes: full product functionality and
"express" license that includes email
management, search, and viewing and markup capability.
The annual cost is determined by actual usage.
Last month, in my article on the AEC
Technology Strategies 2007 Conference, I had
briefly described the implementation of Newforma
Project Center, a relatively new project information
management application specifically developed
for the AEC market, at the firm, Eppstein Uhen
Architects. Newforma has just announced the commercial
availability of the Fourth Edition of the application,
which seems to be gaining a lot of traction in
other leading firms as well, such as HOK, SOM,
and BNIM Architects. HOK, for instance, first
deployed the solution in selected offices in June
2006 and is now expanding its deployment to 1,600
employees across all its 26 offices worldwide
as an important part of its strategy for information
management and efficient project delivery. This
review takes a detailed look at Newforma Project
Center to find out how it works and what accounts
for its remarkable success so far. Since it is
being reviewed in AECbytes for the first time,
we will look at the application as a whole rather
than focus only on the new features in the recently
released version.
Overview of Newforma Project Center
The objective of Newforma Project Center is to
create a more productive environment for project
managers and the project team by organizing project
information, facilitating information exchange,
and streamlining project processes. It is currently
targeted towards architecture and engineering
firms, although plans are on for future versions
to extend its capabilities to cover tasks and
processes specific to construction firms as well.
Unlike a web-based project extranet such as Autodesk
Buzzsaw whose prime focus is on collaboration,
Newforma Project Center is first and foremost
a solution for project information management
within a firm, although it does include an online
component called Info Exchange for external collaboration
as well. It works by installing a server that
sits next to a firm's central server and automatically
indexes and categorizes all the information so
that it can be easily accessed, managed, and searched.
There is no need to move files to specific project
folders, or even to add tags to themthe
indexing system automatically keeps track of what
document belongs to what project. In the case
of project-related email, there are plug-ins to
Microsoft Outlook that allow both incoming and
outgoing emails to be quickly saved with their
respective projects with a single click. In addition
to managing and organizing project documents and
emails, Newforma Project Center includes capabilities
for marking up drawings and snapshots of models,
managing and tracking issues to resolution, and
creating and managing document sets, submittals,
and transmittals.
Newforma Project Center is an enterprise-level
solution, and is priced per user per year. Unlike
regular desktop-based applications that I review
by installing them on my own computer, I had to
review Newforma Project Center by visiting the
Newforma office and working with a sample sets
of projects that had been set up for demonstration
and testing. All the screenshots shown in this
review are of this sample deployment.
Let's move on to look at the different components
of the application in more detail.
Working with Projects
Projects are the primary method by which information
is accessed and organized within Newforma Project
Center and form the basis for all the features
of the application, including issues, transmittals,
submittals, markups, etc. When you launch Newforma
Project Center, the first screen that appears
is My Project Center, shown in Figure 1. Here
you can choose the project you want to work with
from the listing under the "My Projects"
tab, which are the projects on which you are a
team member. You can also open and browse through
other projects available on the Project Center
Server that are listed under the "All Projects"
tab, provided you have the necessary permissions
to do so. The application honors the existing
network permissions that are in place in a firm
and does not impose a separate security model.
Thus, it does not require file permissions to
be duplicated, as is the case with project extranet
solutions that need a parallel security model
to be created.
Figure 1.
The opening screen of Newforma Project Center,
showing a list of projects and an activity summary
of the selected project.
If there are lots of projects listed in My Project
Center, the list can be quickly narrowed down
by entering text to apply as a filter to any of
the columns in the space provided at the top of
every column. For example, entering the word "City"
in the Client column will only show those projects
that have "City" as part of the client
name. You can also enter text for applying as
filter to all the columns. When you select a project,
a summary of all recent activity related to that
project is displayed in the Summary window, including
its issues, Info Exchange transfers, submittals,
transmittals, and project email along with the
corresponding links for quick access to the required
information. A Task list on the left of the Project
Center window shows all the tasks related to this
level of activity such as opening recent files
and setting various preferences such as the configuration
of the activity center, user profile, Outlook
signature, and so on. For those who have administrator
rights, an Administration task is available to
manage and configure Project Center projects,
servers, user accounts, administrators, and the
Info Exchange server (see Figure 2). Context-sensitive
help is available in the Common Questions section,
which lists the questions related to the current
screen and links directly to the relevant section
in the online Help where that question is answered.
This task list and context-sensitive help is a
common feature of the Newforma Project Center
interface that appears in most of its windows,
as you will see in the subsequent images. A toggle
button allows the entire left pane displaying
the task list and common questions to be hidden
or displayed when required.
Figure 2.
The Project Center Administration interface, showing
the range of tasks and settings available for
administrators to configure.
Double-clicking on a project from My Project
Center, shown in Figure 1, opens up the Project
Home activity center, shown in Figure 3-a. This
serves as the project starting point, providing
links to all the files and activities related
to that project and also lists the recent files
that were opened. Projects are created by administrators
who specify key informational fields such as Project
Name, Project Number, Status, and Type. These
settings can be viewed and edited by those with
administrator privileges by using the Edit Project
Settings option in the Project Home window or
the Edit Settings option in the Project Center
Administration interface shown in Figure 2. The
settings are captured in a series of seven dialogs,
the first three of which are shown in Figures
3-b to 3-d. As you can see from the settings,
one of the most important components of a project
is the location of the files associated with it
on a company's network. A project can have several
file locations, each of which is entered as a
root project folder beneath which the files and
nested sub-folders are then associated with the
project by Project Center. As mentioned earlier,
one of the key aspects of the application that
has contributed to its success is that it does
not require firms to move, modify, or restructure
their network-stored project data. Instead, project
administrators simply define projects that reference
the project data as it is currently structured
on their firms' central file servers. The data
is then brought together virtually by Project
Center and conveniently accessible from one place
instead of many different locations.
Figure 3.
The Project Home interface for the project selected
in Figures 1 and 2, and the first three of its
Project Settings dialogs.
Clicking on the Project Files link in the Project
Home window takes you to the Project Files interface
shown in Figure 4, where you can directly access
and browse the folders and files in the currently
open project as well as carry out a number of
project-related tasks. It brings related folders
and files from across the network together in
one place, enabling project-specific search as
well as a convenient way to browse project files
without needing to know the actual file locations
on the network. It provides most of the Windows
Explorer capabilities such as copying and pasting,
moving, deleting, and renaming files and folders
and creating new folders. Additionally, it also
allows duplicate files, which typically proliferate
over time in a project and greatly hamper efficiency,
to be detected and removed. By default, all the
files in a folder are displayed in the Project
Files interface, but you can narrow down the list
by specifying a file type or by using any text
as a filter. Selecting a file shows a preview
of it in the lower right pane. For some file types
such as a PDF, the file is actually read when
it is selected, allowing a full-size preview,
as shown in Figure 4-a. In contrast, for a DWG
file, only the thumbnail image that is stored
with the file is displayed, making it difficult
to get a good preview, as shown in Figure 4-b.
Figure 4.
Previewing a PDF and a DWG project file in the
Project Files interface.
Viewing Files and Creating Markups
Newforma Project Center includes a full-fledged
built-in viewer that allows graphic files to be
viewed and marked up using annotation and drawing
tools. The CAD file formats that can be opened
in the viewer are DWG, DGN, and DXF. Supported
published formats include PDF, DWF, and PLT. Various
raster image formats such as BMP, JPEG, GIF, TIFF,
and PNG can also be opened and used as the basis
for creating markups. Markup sessions get stored
as separate NMU files overlaying the original
source file, which remains unaffected. Figure
5-a shows how the markup sessions related to a
certain drawing can be previewed in the Project
Center, and subsequently opened in the Newforma
Viewer, shown in Figure 5-b. As you can see, this
particular markup file has two markups that are
displayed in the Markups palette on the right.
Selecting a markup directly zooms on the specific
area of the drawing where the markup has been
created. The markup tools, shown on the left,
are simple and easy to use, allowing you to add
leaders, rectangles, ovals, text, and revision
clouds using different pen styles and colors.
Figure 5.
Previewing a markup file in the Project Center
and subsequently opening it in the Newforma Viewer.
While the Newforma Viewer does not directly support
3D viewing/navigation of models exported from
applications such as Autodesk Revit, ArchiCAD,
Bentley Architecture, or AutoCAD, it does provide
a way to include the markups of 3D models as part
of the workflow, which is becoming increasingly
important as BIM (building information modeling)
implementation gains momentum in the AEC industry.
You can either open the files in their native
application, or if the model has been saved in
the 3D DWF format, open it in the free Autodesk
DWF Viewer, as shown in Figure 6-a. You can then
use the Newforma Screen Capture tool, located
in the Newforma Search utility that gets installed
in the Windows Taskbar at the lower right corner
of the screen, to take a snapshot of the screen.
Once you select the area of the screen you want
to capture, it automatically opens up in the Newforma
Viewer, allowing you to overlay it with markups
as required, as shown in Figure 6-b.
Figure 6.
(a) A Revit model that was saved in the 3D DWF
format, which was then opened in Autodesk DWF
Viewer. (b) A snapshot of the model that was captured
and marked up in the Newforma Viewer.
The powerful search capabilities of Newforma
Project Center, which extends to all standard
AEC document types found in project folders, email
(including attachments), Office documents, PDF
files, the contents of zip files, and so on, also
include the ability to search for non-graphical
object data in formats such as DWG, DWF, and IFC.
(Note that while search of IFC files is supported,
the Newforma Viewer does not yet support viewing
of IFC files.) Figure 7-a shows the current project
being searched for the word "elevator."
In the Search Results window, the search has been
narrowed only to published file formats such as
DWF, PDF, PLT, and IFC. As you can see, several
files meet this search criterion, one of which
is subsequently opened in the Newforma Viewer,
shown in Figure 7-b. The Drawing Explorer dialog
in the Newforma Viewer lists all the instances
where the word "elevator" has been detected
in the drawing, whether it is in the form of a
text label, an object name, or an attribute name.
Clicking on any of these instances in the list
takes you directly to that portion of the drawing
where the object or text is located.
Figure 7.
(a) Searching for the word "elevator"
in all files of specified types within a project.
(b) Opening one of these files in the Newforma
Viewer and exploring the different objects and
text labels in which that word appears.
Other capabilities of the Newforma Viewer include
the ability to manipulate drawing visibility by
showing and hiding objects by layer or by type,
counting objects in the drawing and measuring
lengths and areas, and printing scaled views of
the drawing on any system printer. There is also
a comprehensive drawing compare feature that allows
revisions to drawings to be detected and graphically
viewed using a "Digital Light Table"
tool. This feature was described in detail in
the AECbytes Tips and Tricks article, "Animating
Illustrations of Design Changes using Newforma
Project Center" published earlier this
year. You can compare not only two versions of
a drawing but multiple versions as well, with
a compare animator that dynamically transitions
between adjacent drawing versions for a clearer
understanding of how the design has evolved over
the project timeline. There is also a batch compare
capability that allows you to set up a comparison
of a set of baseline drawings with a set of revised
drawings and generate and output color-coded comparisons
to a printer or a PDF file. This lets project
team members quickly scan the color-coded revisions
for unintended or undocumented revisions.
Managing Project Email
One of the most compelling features of Newforma
Project Center is its ability to effectively manage
the proliferation of project-related email, keeping
track of which is becoming a major challenge for
AEC firms. In my article on the AEC
Technology Strategies 2007 Conference, I had
described the example of a Project Manager from
the firm, Eppstein Uhen Architects, whose Email
Inbox had over 4000 emails related to many different
projects and other tasks. This email was not accessible
to others and any email, received or sent, related
to a specific project was not being documented
with the project, unless the Project Manager specifically
saved it out in the project folders. Newforma
Project Center has addressed this problem by developing
plug-ins to Microsoft Outlook that allow both
incoming and outgoing emails to be quickly saved
with their respective projects. Figure 8-a shows
this feature being used to file an incoming email
in Microsoft Outlook to the default location of
a project that was specified in the Edit Project
Settings dialog (shown earlier in Figure 3-d),
using the command from the Project Center add-in
to the Outlook toolbar. If multiple users save
the same message to the same folder, only one
copy is created to avoid duplication. If you are
offline, there is a useful option to save an item
to file later when you are connected. You can
specify what should happen to the Outlook messages
after they are filed in Project Center in the
Filing Instructions section of the File in Project
dialog. If you now access the Project Email activity
center of Newforma Project Center, as shown in
Figure 8-b, you will find the email that was just
filed.
Figure 8.
Filing an email with a project in Microsoft Outlook,
and subsequently viewing it in the Project Email
activity center of Newforma Project Center.
By default, Project Center stores the email messages
in separate subfolders based on month, quarter,
or year, depending upon the option that was selected
in the Edit Project Settings dialog. Additional
email sub-folders can be defined during project
setup to optionally store messages by Client,
Contractor, or any other classification, though
this is not a requirement since Project Center's
filter and search capabilities make it easy to
find specific emails. You can narrow the list
of emails in the Project Email activity center
by choosing a specific filter from the drop-down
list such as Recent Messages (as in Figure 8-b),
Messages to You, Messages from You, All Messages,
and so on. The number of email messages for each
filter category is indicated in parentheses next
to the filter name. You can additionally also
search for text matches in specific columns or
apply text as a filter to all columns.
External Collaboration and Other Capabilities
To facilitate the exchange of project-related
information with external team members easily
and securely, Newforma Project Center includes
a dedicated utility called Newforma Info Exchange.
It is comprised of two components: the Info Exchange
activity center, which is accessible to internal
project team members from within Project Center,
and the Info Exchange Web Server, which can be
accessed by external as well as internal project
team members using a standard Web browser. The
Info Exchange activity center is the location
from which internal team members can send files
to external team members through a guided process
that transfers the selected files (and any associated
XREFs) to the Info Exchange Server and automatically
sends notification email messages with download
links to each recipient. In addition to email
notifications, the Info Exchange Server provides
reminders, automated expiration (deletion), and
a history log (audit trail) for all posted file
transfers. It can also be used by the external
team members to send files back to the internal
team, even if they do not have Newforma Project
Center installed at their end. A compressed ZIP
file containing the file contents of each file
transfer sent or received via Info Exchange is
automatically saved to the record copy location
designated for the project, eliminating the need
for internal project team members to separately
save copies of transferred files.
The Info Exchange activity center within Project
Center can be used to view the status of every
file transfer sent or received via Info Exchange,
including the ability to see who has or has not
downloaded specific file transfers, and, for transfers
sent with the Partial Download capability enabled,
a list of which files were downloaded. Figure
9-a shows the history of an expired transmittal
sent using Info Exchange, showing the dates of
the partial downloads by different members, when
the reminders were sent, and the date it expired.
Figure 9-b shows some of the same transmittals
seen in Figure 9-a listed on the Info Exchange
website.
Figure 9.
(a) Tracking the history of a transmittal sent
using the Info Exchange Server in the Info Exchange
activity center in Newforma Project Center. (b)
A transmittal log on the Newforma Info Exchange
website, showing all the transmittals sent and
their status.
Other important aspects of the AEC workflow that
Newforma Project Center helps to manage are document
sets, transmittals, submittals, and issues, for
each of which the application has a dedicated
activity center, as shown in Figure 10. These
operate in a manner similar to the other capabilities
of the application that have been described so
far. Document sets, shown in Figure 10-a, can
be used to assemble and manage related sets of
deliverables without moving or changing the firm's
underlying file folder convention. A document
set creates a set of references to a group of
files, similar to shortcuts or virtual foldersit
does not alter the actual source files in any
way. Any electronic or physical exchange of information
or materials between project team members can
be logged as a transmittal, which can be managed
using the Project Transmittals interface, shown
in Figure 10-b. Similarly, the Project Submittals
interface, shown in Figure 10-c allows both electronic
and paper submittals to be received, reviewed,
tracked, and logged electronically. The Issue
Manager, shown in Figure 10-d, provides the capability
to create, track, and manage project issues throughout
the life cycle of a project. The Microsoft Outlook
plug-in allows email messages to be easily filed
to a particular issue, giving all project team
members the opportunity to contribute to issue
resolution. Supporting documents and sketches
can also be associated with issues, providing
a permanent record of all issue-related information.
Figure 10.
The activity centers for managing document sets,
transmittals, submittals, and issues in Newforma
Project Center.
Newforma Project Center also includes additional
capabilities such as the ability to import Deltek
Vision project and team information into a new
Project Center project, ensuring the consistency
of basic project information across both applications;
the ability to archive a project so that its files
can be viewed and searched but not edited; a Space
Layout tool that allows program requirements defined
in Microsoft Excel spreadsheets to be used to
generate space plans that reference a set of CAD
or raster drawing files and subsequently generate
space program summary and detailed reports; and
a Takeoff tool that allows measurement or extraction
of units, lengths and areas from source drawings
which can then be exported to an Excel spreadsheet
for analysis or for use in a cost estimating application.
Analysis and Conclusions
For an application that has been in development
for only about 3 years, Newforma Project Center
is remarkably comprehensive and powerful, addressing
all the key project management and execution challenges
that design firms have to face on a day-to-day
basis. In the absence of an application like this,
firms have to rely on various ad-hoc methods to
keep track of project files, emails, file transfers,
document sets, submittals, etc., such as logging
entries in Excel spreadsheets and creating sub-folders
to hold different kinds of information. Employees
have to be trained on how to use these methods,
but because the processes are not formalized,
they are difficult to enforce. Duplicate files
proliferate, it is often difficult to find needed
information, and by and large, there is no accurate
audit trail that can be culled for contractual,
litigation, or other purposes. Given this scenario,
the immediate "Eureka" reaction with
which project managers at Eppstein Uhen Architects
greeted Newforma Project Center (as described
by the firm's Director of Information Technology
at the AEC
Technology Strategies 2007 Conference) is
hardly surprising, as also the recent news that
it is being deployed firmwide at HOK within only
a year of being piloted.
The strongest aspect of Newforma Project Center
is that it doesn't require firms to alter their
IT infrastructure, re-engineer their processes,
or dramatically change the way they work for efficient
project management. Instead, it makes it possible
to gain greater value from software that is already
in place for drafting, BIM, finance, office applications,
email, etc. At the same time, it provides comprehensive
search, drawing, viewing and comparing, markup,
publishing, and external collaboration capabilities
that can replace the use of the many disparate
applications firms use for these individual tasks.
Given the current focus and scope of the application,
the only real shortcoming I found was the poor
quality of its Help documentation, which has an
over-abundance of text and very few illustrations,
providing a less than ideal learning supplement
to the training sessions provided by Newforma
during initial deployment and upgrades. The company
is developing 5-minute training videos, which
should be available soon, on a variety of Project
Center topics that are geared to be the secondary
learning experience after the formal training.
However, with the overall complexity of AEC processes
and the concomitant challenges of managing them,
the importance of a lucid and comprehensive Help
documentation should not be underestimated.
Going forward, the application may have to adapt
to many technological changes, both in general
as well as in the AEC industry in particular.
A good example of a general technological trend
is the move to putting more processes and data
online. For managing project email, for instance,
Newforma Project Center currently only supports
Microsoft Outlook, which is the dominant email
application now. However, it may no longer be
in the future as more and more companies start
using hosted email services such as those provided
by Google. Newforma Project Center will then have
to expand its email support to cover those applications
as well.
In the AEC industry of course, the main transformation
is to do with BIM and the model-based way of working
as opposed to the drawing-based processes that
are currently in place. While Newforma Project
Center is primarily focused on the current drawing-based
project management, it has already incorporated
some object-based capabilities such as the ability
to work with IFC files and search for object-based
data in file formats such as DWF and DWG. This
is a great start. The next step would be for the
Newforma Viewer to support the viewing of 3D models,
if not in their native file formats, then at least
in published formats such as DWF, PDF, and IFC.
This would allow the application to eventually
transition to supporting BIM-based project management
when model-based processes become more commonplace
and replace the current drawing-based processes
in AEC.
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.
Have comments or feedback on this article?
Visit its AECbytes
blog posting to share them with other readers
or see what others have to say.
Reviews >
Newforma Project Center > Printer-friendly
format
|
|