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Construction sites are very dynamic
with various contractors challenging for the space in
which to work and the plant needed to undertake the
work.
A construction site is no different to an office or
a hospital in that there is physical space within which
different groups undertake various activities; indeed
the space planning or management task challenge is even
more challenging in that the window of time for planning
is far tighter than that available in a conventional
building.
Although some of the more thorough planners may break
the site down into zones, the sequence of activities,
and the preparatory work or temporary work required
to support an activity, would be planned far more effectively
if it were done in direct relationship with the plan
of the site and individual plans from each supplier
as to the access they will need and when.
The plan of an entire site is taken into ActivePlan
and a number of intelligent zones created that what
they are, where they are and what they contain. As items
are moved into zones, either visually on the site plan
or textually in the database, each intelligent area
knows what occupies its space; plant, materials, work
activities. Building elements that are associated (perhaps
as part of one system or cluster) can be selected and
grouped (even if they are not physically connected).
The planner may use MS
Project or Primavera
to determine a sequence of activities, thereby providing
the planned start and completion date for each piece
of equipment or work activity that updates the ActivePlan
database, allowing the sequence of work to be clearly
visualised in a 4D model – perhaps turning red
to indicate perceived danger.
Health
& safety also has a important role here
since research has shown that the incidence of accidents
increases in areas where work has become congested,
so the allocation of safe working areas, and the means
to remodel those should a delay impact on when a planned
work package can start, will naturally create a safer
working environment.
Plant hire is a major
cost and one which contractors are keen to monitor.
Main contractors may hire an item and then allow subcontractors
to use it, at a cost, for their packages. As in a hospital,
items of equipment and plant can have an intelligent
tag that can track them either coming on or off the
site, where they should be and who should be using them.
This allows the main contractor to plan and administer
the use of plant and easily manage the recharging process.
This should result in less plant being required through
improved planning, better utilisation of plant when
it is in place, easier administration on site and improved
management reporting to understand what plant could
come off hire and when and contribution to a knowledge
base with analysis of what plant was actually used and
needed to inform future plant procurement decisions.
It may be the case that analysis indicates that access
to certain (perhaps more expensive) types of plant had
a significant effect of productively and could be built
into a value-added offer to future clients.
How to pay for work completed is now being widely questioned
and ActivePlan’s ability to make logical associations
between physical items can help with this. An electrical
contractor may be unhappy to wait until the whole of
a service is completed, through 1st fix and 2nd fix,
so the cost manager could use ActivePlan
to identify what he considers to be a reasonable group
of work that justifies payment giving the contractor,
and the rest of the team, a clear understanding of what
is expected. If another activity looks as though it
may interfere with this, it can be clearly identified
and, at best, avoided or at worst, removing the basis
of a dispute.
ActivePlan can also be
used to track the delivery and storage of materials,
allowing planners to plan the space needed and also
the most appropriate location to drop them to support
individual packages of work. Time-evented models allow
the construction team to identify what materials will
be needed by whom and when, what routes they will take
to carry them to the point of fixing and any issues
delays in other work packages may have.
Time-evented (or 4D) modelling
has not been widely implemented, largely because it
requires each activity to related to an object in a
CAD model, a level of modelling nor normally undertaken.
ActivePlan’s ability
to hold multiple logical relationships against any object
means that a 2D CAD layout for an internal wall can
be translated into ActivePlan’s database and a
number of activities – build, 1st electrical,
drylining, plaster finishing, 2nd fix electrical, decoration
and electrical finish are all related to the same object
in ActivePlan. This means time-evented modelling can
be undertaken using conventional 2D construction drawings
without producing special 3D models.
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