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Blurring the Lines between Spatial and Geospatial
The Convergence of Construction, Engineering, Geospatial, and 3D Simulation
Geoff Zeiss
Autodesk, Inc., Canada
geoff.zeiss@autodesk.com
The world's construction industry's
annual spend is estimated
to be US$2.3 trillion in
2006/2007. According to research firm Proleads
the value of Gulf construction projects
is estimated at US$2.4 trillion.
The world's construction industry is
facing serious challenges including
global climate change, aging infrastructure,
a shrinking workforce, and
declining productivity. One of the
major challenges is the lack of investment
in R&D that has historically differentiated
construction from other
industries. To enable architects, engineers,
construction firms, and owners
and operators of buildings and infrastructure
to address these challenges,
the construction industry is investing
in new technologies such as modeldriven
design, geospatial enabling, and
3D simulation.
CHALLENGES FACING THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY
Global Climate Change
The share of Americans calling global
warming the most important environmental
issue rose from 11% in 2003 to
35% in 2006. In the US alone, buildings
account for 39% of total energy use,
68% of total electricity consumption,
and 38% of total carbon dioxide emissions.
Many of our existing buildings
and infrastructure are going to have to
be either replaced or retrofitted to
achieve zero net carbon emissions and
minimize environmental impact while
at the same time yield a respectable
financial return on investment.
Aging infrastructure
In the US, the Federal Highway Administration
(FHwA) reports that outdated
and substandard road and bridge
design, pavement conditions, and safety
features are factors in 30% of all fatal
highway accidents. The ASCE estimates
that motor vehicle crashes cost U.S. citizens
$230 billion per year, or $819 for
each resident for medical costs; lost
productivity; travel delay; and workplace,
insurance and legal costs. The
ASCE estimates that a total investment
of $1.6 trillion over five years is required
to bring US infrastructure to good condition.
Shrinking workforce
In the US a Conference Board study predicted
that by 2010, the number of
workers aged 35 to 44 will decline by
19%; the number of workers aged 45 to
54 will increase 21%; and the number of
workers aged 55 to 64 will increase 52%.
This is a world-wide phenomenon (Fig.
1). A report prepared in 2004 by the U.S.
Department of Labor (DOL), reported
that "industry leaders noted that the
construction industry is experiencing a
shortage of workers. This current shortage
is complicated by two trends: the
growth of the industry, and the retirement
of the "baby boomers."
Declining Productivity
Statistics published by US Bureau of
Labor Statistics show that in the last 40
years while non-farm productivity has
increased by over 200% productivity in
the construction industry has actually
declined (Fig. 2). In the context of the
challenges already mentioned, this is
creating a crisis for the construction
industry. The utility industry is facing
not only a shrinking workforce, but also
a loss of knowledge and experience as
experienced workers retire and the
industry is unable to attract younger
personnel to replace them. In the utility
industry the average age of the workforce
is close to 50.
Islands of Information
Traditionally disciplines such as architecture,
structural engineering, construction,
civil engineering, and GIS
represent classic information silos.
Each has maintained its own information
island comprised of design applications
and data. CAD/BIM desktop applications
are the source of most of the
precision design data about the world's
infrastructure data including buildings,
roads and highways, pipelines, utility
and telecommunications networks. In
organizations responsible for infrastructure,
precision design information
is critical for operations and maintenance,
but the flow of this essential
information between groups within
30 GIS
the organization is typically paperbased
and inefficient. National Institute
of Standards and Technology
(NIST) estimated that poor interoperability
(including design, engineering,
facilities management, and business
processes software systems and redundant
paper records management across
the entire facility life-cycle) cost the US
capital facilities industry $15.8 billion in
2002.
NEW DESIGN TECHNOLOGIES
To enable architects, engineers, and
owners and operators of buildings and
infrastructure to address these challenges,
leading members of the construction
industry are investing in new
technologies such as model-driven
design, geospatial enabling, and 3D
simulation technologies. The business
drivers for these transformative technology
advances are productivity and
efficiency in the construction and facilities
management industry.
Model Driven Design
Traditional CAD drawings lack intelligence
because they are designed to produce
a paper drawing. Model-driven
design makes it possible to create an
intelligent representation of real world
object such as a building or infrastructure.
In architectural design this is
referred to as building information
modeling or BIM, and many people in
the industry, such as the US GSA, are
convinced that BIMs not only reduce
the costs of design and construction for
new structures, but also significantly
reduce the downstream costs associated
with operation and maintenance.

Fig 1.
Geospatial Enabling
One of the most important trends in IT
in the last five years is geospatial
enabling. Search engines from Google,
Microsoft, Yahoo, and others incorporate
geospatial technology. Most of the
major relational databases including
Oracle, DB2, Informix, PostGIS/PostgreSQL,
MySQL, and soon Microsoft SQL
Server incorporate spatial data types.
Computers, automobiles, and cell
phones now incorporate GPS technology.
Geospatial is also becoming a key
dimension of engineering and architectural
design (Fig. 3).
Architectural and engineering design
is fundamentally spatial. The only real
line between spatial meaning engineering
and geospatial is the type of
coordinate system used. Most CAD
applications are now
able to support real
world coordinate systems.
In addition the
Industry Foundation
Classes developed and
maintained by the IAI
are also being geospatially
enabled as a
result of an alliance
formed several years
ago between the IAI,
which is responsible for the IFC standard,
and the OGC. This is being driven
by local government regulation, for
example, right to light, noise abatement,
view protection, and wind modeling
requirements, and by green building
objectives such as maximizing open
space, reducing impervious cover,
reducing heat islands, reducing light
pollution, reducing energy use, whole
building energy simulation, renewable
energy systems, and daylight simulation
required for LEED certification.

Fig 2.
3D Simulation
3D simulation technology allows
architects to design and experience a
building or highway before it is built.
Often referred to as digital prototyping,
3D simulation relies on many of the
same 3D visualization and simulation
technologies underlying computer
games, and allows architects and engineers
to convey their designs more
effectively, reduces the risk of major
modifications to built structures, and
enables optimization of buildings and
infrastructure for their full life-cycle
including operations and maintenance.

Fig 3.
Convergence
Convergence provides a framework of
interoperability across the lifecycle of
building and infrastructure investment
involving design, construction, and
operation and enables seamless access
to architectural, engineering design,
and geospatial data inside, outside, and
under a facility.
NEW DESIGN TECHNOLOGIES APPLIED
At Autodesk University last year, David
Yau of Henderson Land reported on a
successful project that illustrates the
importance of convergence in the construction
industry. Henderson developed
a twin 24 four story tower building
called the World Financial Centre in
downtown Beijing (Fig. 4, 5). Because of
the imminent Beijing Olympics there
was a very tight timeframe for completing
the structure and removing
construction cranes and Henderson
could not afford a delay in their schedule.
In addition Henderson had an ecoobjective,
that the building would be
LEED certified. Construction has been
called the only industry that creates a
full-scale prototype. A major source of
construction delays is what are called
clashes, conflicts between different
sub-system designs such as heating
and ventilation and plumbing and
drainage that requires redesign after
construction has begun. To reduce the
risk of this type of delay occurring during
construction, Henderson created
BIM models of the key building systems
including structural, heating and ventilation,
fire services, electrical, plumbing
and drainage, and used a BIM application
to detect and correct clashes (to
within a millimeter) during the design
phase.
Henderson also had to model the outside
environment surrounding the
building to create a thermal flow simulation
(Fig. 6) to identify and reduce
heat island, to run daylight simulations
for daylight within the building and to
model the external space around the
building to optimize green space outside
of the building. In this example the
combination of these technologies
enabled Henderson to complete the
World Financial Center in an ecofriendly
way on schedule and on budget.
This is a practical example of how
modern architectural and engineering
design technologies driven by challenges
such as tight schedules and ecofriendly
requirements are impacting
how building are designed & built.
URBAN SIMULATION
But convergence is also enabling us to
realize what Roger Tomlinson, often
referred to as the Father of GIS, foresaw
in 1975, being able to simulate " a model
of the earth on a computer that functions
like the earth, including all people,
places, things and processes... we've
got a tool that allows us describe the
world with much greater facility than
we ever have before." In other
words by integrating
architectural and engineering
design, geospatial, and
aerial and underground
infrastructure data in an
interactive 3D visualization
environment we are now
able to simulate an entire
city.
The data that is required for
a seamless view of an urban
environment already exists
in precision digital form, in
the form of CAD drawing
files, BIM models, utility and
telecommunication network
infrastructure databases,
and geospatial data (Fig. 7, 8).
The objective is to re-use the
precision data that was created
when a facility is
designed. This involves integrating
precision engineering
data to deliver a precise
synthetic environment that
can be used to simulate the
inside (utilities, HVAC systems,
furniture, elevators,
walls, doors, windows, and
structural details), outside
(aerial utilities, full city
blocks of 3D detail, road
access), and under (underground
water, wastewater,
gas, power, and telecommunications
systems) of an
urban environment and to
make this available in a
seamless, easy-to-use, interactive
model familiar to digital
gamers that allows the
user to visualize and analyze
all aspects of the facility,
inside, outside, and underneath.
For example, this type
of urban simulation can be
used to analyze the impact of
a building on a utility network,
how the building will
shade the surrounding area
at different times of the day
and year, how much daylight
will be available in interior
spaces at different times
of the day and of the year,
how noise from a nearby
sports stadium will impact
residents of the building, and
how the building will affect
traffic patterns.
The ability to simulate
entire urban environments
has implications for urban
planners including the ability
to simulate urban redevelopment
projects, 3D zoning,
for example, view protection
(view cones and view corridors),
noise abatement, right
to light, wind modelling,
daylight simulation, call
before you dig, as well as
emergency planning and
first response (Fig. 9).
New technologies including
model-driven design,
geospatial-enabling, 3D simulation
are dramatically
improving the productivity
of the construction industry.
But these technology
advances will also impact
other areas benefitting from
a cross-disciplinary approach
such as urban planning,
urban redevelopment, emergency
planning, and first
response.