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What is XChange?

This event has now ended. Stay tuned for details of Xchange 2025! We look forward to seeing you there!


Xchange 2024 is the first of its kind, a brand new buildingSMART Australasia annual event running over 2 days. It combines a unique technical learning experience on Day 1, and a line-up of handpicked speakers who will discuss how Digital transformation and open standards are changing the infrastructure industry on Day 2. This inaugural event is a must for anyone working in the infrastructure sector.


Day 1 (3rd July - 8.30am-6pm*) – Technical Short Course – what you will learn

Join us at UTS (Building 11- FEIT) for The OpenBIM with IFC Short Course. 


This 1-day series of workshops offers a technical training program covering core buildingSMART technologies and digital workflows applicable to building and civil infrastructure projects. 

The course provides an opportunity for subject matter experts to share knowledge and best practice in the concepts and application of buildingSMART technologies. 


Attendees receive a Certificate from bSA in the use of IFC in the AECO industry.


Day 2 (4th July - 8.30am-6pm*) – Conference – what you will hear

Presentations and panels covering topics focused on digital transformation in the infrastructure sector and the importance of open standards. Sessions may include the following:


  • Keynote: Ian Howell - buildingSMART International Chair on how open standards are being used around the world and the future direction of buildingSMART

  • Updates from Government infrastructure delivery agencies on current digital strategies and the application of Open Standards

  • New and upcoming digital standards impacting infrastructure

  • Best practice presentations on the application of global and local open standards

  • Initiatives in upskilling industry in Digital Engineering & BIM

  • Fully catered including daily networking event


* Each day commences with registration at 8.30am  and ends with a networking event (beverages and canapes) from 5.15-6pm


Speakers

The Hon. Victor Dominello

Former NSW Senior Government Minister | Chief Executive Officer, Future Government Institute | Co-Founder, ServiceGen

Q&A HIGHLIGHT: Victor Dominello is a former senior NSW Government minister, best  known for serving as the inaugural Minister for Customer Service and  Digital, a role he pioneered globally in 2019. Recognised by The  Australian in July 2022 as one of Australia’s top 100 innovators,  Victor spent 12 years in cabinet leading portfolios including Digital  Government, Innovation, Finance, and Aboriginal Affairs. His  leadership earned international acclaim for revolutionising NSW  public service delivery through initiatives like the Department of  Customer Service, Service NSW, and the Digital Restart Fund. 


Prior to his political career, Victor practiced law for over a decade,  becoming a partner in a commercial firm. In September 2023, he cofounded ServiceGen, a consultancy advising governments and  organisations on innovative service delivery strategies. Through  ServiceGen, he was selected by The World Bank to spearhead a  transformative digital identity initiative in Mongolia. In February 2025,  he launched the Future Government Institute, a global hub for  forward-thinking public sector leaders, innovators, and practitioners  dedicated to shaping the next era of governance. 


In March 2025, Victor was named one of The Identity 25 by Okta  Ventures, recognising global pioneers shaping the future of digital  identity. As part of the announcement, Victor’s image was featured  on the Nasdaq Tower in New York’s Times Square—a celebration of  his contribution to secure, citizen-focused identity innovation. 


Victor currently holds several prominent roles: Chair of the Services  Australia Independent Advisory Board, Senior Advisor for the Tony  Blair Institute for Global Change, and Professor at the University of  New South Wales. He also serves as a Director of the UNSW-UTS  Trustworthy Digital Society Hub and a Board Director of the Tech  Council of Australia

Gavin Cairns

Department of Transport & Main Roads - Principal Designer - Digital Systems

Gavin has 20 years of experience in civil and structural infrastructure delivery. Gavin has been developing openBIM systems and documentation for road and rail infrastructure since his involvement in TMR’s first BIM pilot in 2014. Gavin is extremely passionate about leveraging openBIM workflows into TMR’s business procedures to meet their client specific Project Information Requirements. Gavin is a lead contributor to openBIM standards for transport infrastructure as part of buildingSMART Australasia’s IFC working groups.

Andrew Curthoys

Chair, Australasian BIM Advisory Board

Andrew is Chair of the Australasian BIM Advisory Board (ABAB) an industry and government representative board across Australia and New Zealand. He has extensive policy development experience in BIM and asset management. He recognises the value that digitalisation can contribute in all elements of the design, construction and operations and maintenance phases of infrastructure. He believes it is clear that digitalisation can help significantly in the decarbonisation challenge that government and industry face. 

Atsushi Yamamoto

Director - Infrastructure Digitalisation - Infrastructure NSW

Atsushi is a strategy and policy executive with Infrastructure NSW, currently leading the implementation of the NSW Infrastructure Digitalisation Program. Prior to this, he led the development of the NSW State Infrastructure Strategy 2022-2042 as Project Director. Atsushi has a passion for working with cross-functional teams to drive sustained and genuine transformation. 

Peter Stuart

Associate Director - Infrastructure Digitalisation - INSW

Peter is a Digital Engineering Technical advisor for Infrastructure NSW working on the NSW Infrastructure Digitalisation Program. Previously he was the Director of Digital Engineering Integration at Transport for NSW leading the team responsible for the implementation of the TfNSW Digital Engineering Framework. Peter is passionate about digital engineering and strives to uplift industry into adopting and utilising data in all aspects of the built environment. 

Paul Morgan

Senior Technical Specialist - Digital Build, Victorian Health Building Authority

Paul leads VHBA’s Digital Build program, where technology & data come together to transform Victoria’s health infrastructure. His team develops and manages VHBA’s Digital Engineering and BIM strategy, delivering solutions that empower people, streamline processes, and leverage technology to meet the evolving demands of infrastructure delivery.


With a decade of experience in BIM and Digital Engineering across architecture and construction, Paul combines strategic vision with deep practical expertise, while his on-site experience on major infrastructure projects underpins VHBA’s holistic Digital Build strategy. Paul also chairs the Australasian Health Infrastructure Alliance (AHIA) BIM Subgroup, driving greater digital maturity and consistency across Australian and New Zealand government health departments. 

Christopher Raitviir

Head of Digital Construction - City of Tallinn

Christopher Raitviir is a Head of Digital Construction in the City of Tallinn. He is leading digitalization of built environment life cycle processes in the City of Tallinn from urban planning to facility management and giving his experience to development of Tallinn Digital Twin. Previously he has developed Estonian BIM-based building permit process when working for the Ministry of Climate. Christopher has a Master of Science degree in civil engineering and is currently doing his PhD on the topic of “Synchronization of Information Flows of Digital Twins in Construction”. He is strong believer of international collaboration and active member in European Network for Digital Building Permits and steering committee member of EU BIM Task Group.

Dion Moult

Emerging Digital Engineering Manager at Lendlease

Dion has more than 15 years of experience working in open source software and software development. In the past he has been involved with the following open source software projects: Blender, KDE, Gentoo Linux, Radiance, OpenStreetMaps, OpenStreetCam, and FreeCAD. 


He has a M. Arch and has worked in large architectural and construction firms.  Since August 2019, Dion has had the opportunity to develop the BlenderBIM Add-on. The objective of the BlenderBIM Add-on project is to provide a complete, Native IFC, free software pipeline to replace proprietary software in the architecture, engineering, construction, and facility management industries.  Dion is also one of the founders of the Open Source Architecture (OSArch) community. This active community, with more than 1000 members, has a forum, chat group, wiki knowledge base, news site, monthly presentations and training resources, to support an ecosystem of 100+ open source software developed for the AECO industries.

Bonnie Ryan

General Manager Industry Engagement, GS1 Australia

Bonnie is an accomplished and passionate supply chain and eBusiness professional with 30 years’ experience working with many top 200 companies in different industry sectors including retail, manufacturing and transport.


Her knowledge and expertise regarding supply chain digitalization underpins her current responsibilities for leading GS1 Australia’s engagement across a broad sector portfolio to enhance the digital capability of industry through the adoption of global data standards.


Bonnie works with key public and private stakeholders to support and facilitate whole of industry initiatives where common benefits can be derived through effective collaboration.  She is an active participant on several domestic and global committees and working groups striving to innovate, through relevant technology approaches to bring positive business and economic outcomes. 


Bonnie holds a Master of Business Management from Monash University.

Kimberley Wilkinson

Project Management Lead, MM Victoria and Collaboration Lead for VTDE Program

Through her combined Project Management, Client Side and Construction experience, Kimberley possesses a keen appreciation of the processes and behind-the-scenes issues affecting major capital works projects. Her construction, planning and leadership of teams, have allowed Kimberley to excel in her management of complex projects. Working primarily on social infrastructure projects over her 25 year career, Kimberley has increased her knowledge of these complex projects, mainly in live operational environments.  


Joining Mott MacDonald as Technical Director in 2022, Kimberley is the Project Management and Major Projects Lead for the Melbourne office managing a Project Management team to deliver successful outcomes for our clients.  


Kimberley joined the VTDE team as the Collaboration Lead in 2023 to assist DTP and VIDA realise their vision of transforming the way large Victorian Infrastructure and Transport Projects managed their project data through the use of Digital Engineering tools, standards, processes and requirements.


Karl Fitzpatrick

Spatial Information Manager - Auckland Airport Ltd

Karl Fitzpatrick is the Spatial Information Manager for Auckland Airport in New Zealand and is tasked with reimagining how built environment data can be utilized in a business that isn’t your typical AEC firm. Having previously studied Architecture in New Zealand and working as an Architect on healthcare projects in Finland, Karl has experience working on both sides of large-scale and complex projects. Karl is passionate about the need for OpenBIM and fostering innovation by not dictating what tools the supply chain must use, but rather, setting clear requirements for data delivery.

Jackson Tucker

Principal Technical Engineer, Digital Build, Victorian Health Building Authority

Jackson is the Technology Lead of VHBA’s Digital Build program, bringing nearly two decades of experience as a BIM and technology leadership in architectural practice. His background as a vocational TAFE teacher in AEC digital applications gives him a rare ability to distil complex technical concepts into clear, actionable solutions. Jackson excels at translating requirements and fostering collaboration across disciplines — a capability central to advancing VHBA’s Digital Build strategy and delivering smarter, data-driven health infrastructure for Victoria.

Speakers
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Agenda

Day 1

– Technical Short Course

8.30am-6pm

Getting Started with openBIM

Holger De Groot

What you will learn...

Core buildingSMART technologies - IFC, IDM/MVD, BSDD and BCF

* What is openBIM? Why openBIM?   Benefits of openBIM

* Information Requirements -   buildingSMART Data Dictionary (bSDD) and Information Delivery Specification   (IDS)

* Creating and Validating Information -   Industry Foundation Class (IFC) and BIM Collaboration Format (BCF)

* Exchange Information - Information   Delivery Manual (IDM) and Model View Definition (MVD)

Moving Ahead with IFC 4.3

Scott Beazley & Jon Mirtschin

What you will learn...

Application of buildingSMART technologies including IFC4.3

* IFC 4.3 New Classes, Attributes, Relationships and Class Hierarchy

* IFC4.3 Software tools

IFC Model Setup and Information Delivery Manual and Information Delivery Specification

Dion Moult

Exporting and Importing IFC Files​ - Verification of Requirements

Dion Moult

Introduction to Programming for IFC, Toolkits, Geometry Engines & BlenderBIM

Dion Moult

OpenBIM Project Solutions & BSA feedback session

Expert Panel

* Addressing technical barriers to   successful use of openBIM

* openBIM Project Mobilisation & Technical  Training: Panel Discussion with Ian Howell, Eric Bugeja, Jim Plume, John   Mitchell, Jon Mirtschin, Dion Moult, Holger de Groot, & Scott Beazley.   Chaired by A/Prof. Julie Jupp.

Participants will get the opportunity to discuss challenges and solutions in the implementation of openBIM on their projects and provide feedback to buildingSMART on what BSA should be addressing in the future

Learnings from Industry Best Practice, Vendor Sessions

led by bSA leads

Sessions include:

* Transport for NSW: Adding Value to Transport for NSW with IFC

* AEC vendors including 12D, Vectorworks and ArchiCAD (Graphisoft)  will undertake software specific sessions (see below) where they will discuss how to work with open standards such as IFC within their own software.

Adding value to Transport for NSW with IFC

Greg Paul - DE Specialist, TfNSW

The presentation covers how the TfNSW Digital Engineering common data model is implemented through IFC to create an interoperable deliverable to facilitate project delivery and risk management.

Highway Design and Transport's DE Framework

Tony Ingold - Extra Dimension Solutions

Transport for New South Wales has defined comprehensive DE requirements for Civil Designers delivering designs for Highway Infrastructure in NSW. 12d Solutions provides sophisticated tools that allow Consultants to deliver designs that provide best practise for engineering, and that meet Transport's DE requirements. We will showcase examples of recent projects where Designers have used these tools during design, to deliver a fully attributed 3d digital twin.

Infrastructure Digital Twins enabled by openBIM with IFC

Aaron Traylen - Director of Digital Enablement, Aurecon

Infrastructure digital twins enabled by openBIM with IFC are revolutionising the management and operation of infrastructure projects by leveraging comprehensive, interoperable data models. This technical session will demonstrate the openBIM workflows supported by the IFC 4.3 schema used on a major rail infrastructure project to ensure that all stakeholders can collaborate effectively, enabling the sharing and accessing of accurate, standardised information throughout the project's lifecycle.

Vectorworks Kung Fu: Transform Your Site and Urban Design Workflows

Troy Diamond - Technical Support Specialist, Vectorworks

Unlock the potential of publicly available data to revolutionize concept and pre-design workflows. Leverage GIS shape files, feature service layers, and LiDAR-based elevation data – converting lengthy tasks into minutes.

Delivery Specifications (IDS) implementation using Archicad and Solibri

Vimal Kumar - Customer Success Manager, Graphisoft

The recent traction in Information Delivery Specifications (IDS) implementation is driven by standardization efforts, technological advancements, and real-world case studies demonstrating the benefits of IDS. As the AEC industry continues to evolve, IDS is set to play a critical role in ensuring efficient, accurate, and compliant information delivery in BIM projects. Graphisoft's Archicad 28 introduces a powerful feature to integrate IDS into its BIM Modelling workflow. With this new feature, IDS file can be imported seamlessly enabling the users to model building elements and add requisite information according to the criteria set out in the IDS. The IFC Translator within Archicad 28 is enhanced to automatically map properties based on IDS requirements. This automation ensures that all necessary information is correctly aligned with the corresponding IFC schema. When the IFC file is exported from Archicad, it carries all the information structured according to the IDS requirements. The exported IFC can be checked in Solibri Office, a powerful model checking software, to validate the compliance of the model data with the IDS requirements. This workflow enables enhanced compliance & Quality Control, improved efficiency and seamless interoperability.

IFC Project Showcase

John Mitchell

buildingSMART International 2022/23 Award Winners and Best Practices

Closing Session & Networking Drinks

Ian Howell (BSI Chair) and Eric Bugeja (BSA Chair)

What's included...

* buildingSMART International Strategic Roadmap - in conversation with Ian Howell, chaired by Eric Bugeja

* Certificate Awards

* Canapes and Networking Drinks

Day 2

– Conference

8.30am-6pm

Welcome & Introduction

Eric Bugeja - buildingSMART ANZ

Conference welcome

Keynote - The future of buildingSMART

Ian Howell - Chair of buildingSMART International

Hear about the future of buildingSMART and how open standards are being used around the world, directly from the Chair of buildingSMART International.

Open BIM Standards for Infrastructure

Jim Plume - Director and Secretary of buildingSMART Australasia

Addressing IFC 4.3, BIM/GIS initiatives and recent work on handover of information at project completion to support operations and management.

BIM Update - QLD Transport & Main Roads

Pooya Saba - Director (Road Design), Gavin Cairns (CADD Systems)

Pooya will provide an update overview of where TMR are with BIM implementation; which will by Gavin’s expertise with BIM for Bridges published content and the future direction with Civil works. TMR will also discuss the work they are doing with buildingSMART Australasia in the IFC realm

Change Journey

Devon Middleditch - Executive Director Digital Engineering Services, Transport for NSW

We discuss the journey Transport for NSW has been on at both an industry and organisational level, the foundational requirements to gain enough traction to scale, and showcase several initiatives currently providing value to projects across the state.

BIM, not just for design

Sophie Denford - Director Digital Engineering, Sydney Metro

...

NSW Infrastructure Digitalisation Roadmap - what is it and what's next?

Atsushi Yamamoto - Director - Strategy, Planning & Innovation - Infrastructure NSW

A brief overview of the NSW Infrastructure Digitalisation Roadmap, and the initiatives Infrastructure NSW is leading to drive widespread adoption and application of digital practices and tools throughout the public infrastructure lifecycle. 

Building big digital dreams - is leadership needed?

Andrew Curthoys, Australasian BIM Advisory Board (ABAB)

This is a story about big ambition for mega infrastructure projects across Australasia. Cross River Rail in Brisbane, benefitted enormously from leadership by the CEO, Graeme Newton. Suburban Rail Loop in Melbourne is standing on the shoulders of other projects across Australia and the CEO Frankie Carroll has identified that important role and value that digital enablement will contribute to the project. But this doesn’t happen in isolation. APCC and ACIF identified in 2016 that a coordinated approach needed to be developed to ensure benefits of utilising BIM/DE would accrue across the lifecycle of projects. APCC and ACIF created the Australasian BIM Advisory Board incorporating all jurisdictions across Australia and New Zealand and relevant industry groups. ABAB's mission is for consistency across jurisdictions. I will draw on my experience from Queensland where I led the development of the BIM policy which was part of the State Infrastructure Plan (SIP) 2016 and set a big policy agenda for Queensland to reshape infrastructure assessment, provision, funding and delivery. Importantly, in that work was embedded policy initiatives to ensure that digital would be central to projects over $50M. In 2021, Infrastructure Australia identified through the Australian Infrastructure Plan 2021 that digital was no longer by exception but now by default. How do we as a nation grapple with digital by default. My journey – SIP 2016, Australian Infrastructure Plan 2021, Digital by default, now digital embedded in mega projects is instructive about the role that ABAB plays and contributes. To further explore the examples, Cross River Rail in Brisbane and Suburban Rail Loop in Melbourne are stories of big ambition. These are transformative projects for Brisbane and Queensland and for Melbourne and Victoria. Would anyone contemplate not utilising digital to derive and deliver significant benefits in terms of the project design, construction, delivery, testing and then into operations and maintenance? The answer is clearly, NO. For some time, industry has been saying we need to do things differently, to improve productivity to improve outcomes, digital and ABAB leadership provides that support to government and industry. A question to contemplate, “Where does digital now fit in terms of mega projects?” Really it is focused on sustainable, regenerative, circular economy and digital, but projects can’t deliver this in isolation and governments want to see consistency and industry wants to see a level of certainty when it is tendering for work. That is why ABAB plays a crucial role and leadership is needed if we are going to build big projects.

Introduction to Model Conditioning and Validation

Scott Beazley - Digital Technologies Manager at Mitchell Brandtman, openBIM Consultant at Geometry Gym

 A look at IFC model quality review techniques and what conditioning of models is required in downstream use for costing, construction planning and carbon calculations

Getting ahead of Risk in Digital Delivery: Model Data Validation for Major Infrastructure Projects

Ligia Durante Trinidade - Digital Engineering Lead, WSP

With in-depth attribute requirements becoming mandatory by Clients and Contractors, such a significant amount of data is generated with the intent to be used for Asset Management, cost estimation and quantity take-off. However, if not checked and validated diligently, the information derived from the model may pose a high risk to the project. 

In this session I will share strategies for getting ahead of risk by exploring automated methods of model attribute embedment and data validation.

Structured openBIM - also essential for Construction

Fiona Becchio - Associate Principal Digital Solutions, EIC Activities (CIMIC)

IFC and structured BIM used to be something that was typically provided only to meet a deliverable requirement. Contractors are now relying on stuctured openBIM to improve the efficiency of construction activities such as Planning, Estimating and setout. This session will highlight the importance of setting BIM requirements for the needs of construction and how provided information is validated and conditioned for purposes such as automated 4D planning.

Integrated Digital Delivery (IDD): A case study in the use of IDD on Westgate Tunnel Project

Ken Panitz (IDD Tech) and Jason McGavin (CPB Contractors)

This presentation will cover: 

Stakeholders

- CPB and Westgate Tunnel Project

- IDD Tech

- EIC Activities

Westgate Case Study – Bridge 73

- Introduction to the Project & Bridge 73

- Traditional approach (The problem)

- A better solution – how IDD was used (The solution)

-- GIS – setting context - (Image, Vector and Scene Services)   

-- BIM – working with real engineering design (ACC, Hierarchy, Prefabs and Grasshopper)

-- Time – Optimising Delivery (XER import and subtasks)

-- Resources – Lift Planning, Traffic Planning, Logistics and Laydown Planning, Excavation planning, ----Space Proofing.  (Plant Library, Keyframes & Mounting)

-- Communication – Bringing it all together in sequences, videos and AR/XR

About ToBe Builder

- Four Pillars of an IDD Approach (GIS, BIM, Time & Resources)

- Features & Technical Description of Solution (Esri, ACC & Schedule Integrations)

- Outcomes and Benefits of IDD approach

Using IDS and BlenderBIM for Model conditioning

Dion Moult - Emerging Digital Engineering Manager, Lendlease

Using the BlenderBIM Add-on to open and run an IDS, Getting data types right in IDS, Where to find ISO-standardised attributes, properties, and quantities in the IFC docs instead of requiring custom properties, Defining property set templates

A modern conundrum - Can we deliver our projects - without drawings?

Oystein Ulvestad (Arup) & John Legge-Wilkinson (Arup)

If a picture tells a thousand words – how much value does a model bring? 


Our role as designers is to communicate our design with all other parties in a project.  Use of advanced digital tools allow our teams to communicate more effectively with the client, stakeholders, construction, fabrication, and site teams essentially rendering drawings irrelevant, leading to the big question …  can we deliver our bridge projects without the use of design drawings? 


Oystein will present and outline how Scandinavian countries like Norway have used a model-based delivery approach (without drawings) for the design and construction of major bridge and infrastructure projects such as the 634m Randselva Bridge in Norway designed by Sweco, leading to a 10% reduction in construction costs compared to a traditional drawing-based approach. Oystein will also show how this drawing free workflow has been successfully used for smaller more traditional bridge projects.  


John will outline how a similar mindset has been adopted for the design and construction of bridge projects such as Eumemmering Creek in Melbourne and the value that comes by providing more detail such as 3d rebar and 3d steelwork connections in the design model helping to streamline the design and construction process reducing risk and saving time in the delivery programme.

AECO Ecosystem Interoperability

Dr Robert Doe (University of South Australia)

This talk reports the findings and conclusions of recent research into substandard performance between information systems and applications which remain a problem for the Architecture, Engineering, Construction, and Operations (AECO) sector, and lead to significant economic, social and environmental costs. The sector suffers from poor interoperability because it lacks a holistic ecosystem for exchanging data and information. As a result of collaboration between the University of South Australia (UniSA), GHD and DBM Vircon this research extends understanding of issues which affect ecosystem interoperability in the AECO sector. Research questions guided a review, survey, semi-structured interview, focus group meeting, and interpretation of the results. The authors believe that incorporating AECO sector industry partners' views is essential for meaningful proposals to emerge. Open questions asked of industry partners received candid responses and confirmed key issues including: the need for the Industry Foundation Class (IFC) to be fully interoperable; the side effects and impacts of vendor lock-in; integration problems caused by multiple Common Data Environments (CDEs); handover data and information challenges; the impacts of poor interoperability on sustainable development. Through engagement with industry this research offers better understanding of interoperability challenges in the AECO sector and has generated more meaningful actions and solutions capable of improving the sector’s data and ecosystem interoperability.

Building Product Traceability

Bonnie Ryan - General Manager Industry Engagement, GS1

Unpacking the Global Traceability Framework – key principles and how does it fit with BIM models.

Leveraging BIM for low-carbon design

Sandra Lang - Director - Digital Engineering (Systra), Director buildingSMART ANZ

With 39% of global emissions coming from buildings and their construction, we need to decarbonise the way we design and build to bring our emissions down to meet net zero targets. Assessing the carbon footprint of infrastructure is more complex than doing so for buildings.


To do this, urgent and ambitious action is required and we, as engineers, architects and consultants have an important role to play.


Most of the carbon footprint is locked in at the conclusion of the design process as designers don’t have the right information at the right time to evaluate the Carbon impact of their design decisions.


At SYSTRA we believe that we can make a significant difference by having low carbon solutions at the heart of our design process.


During this session we will present our approach to sustainable design and the innovation that has been implemented with CARBONTRACKER, which is a tool that supports our sustainability commitments by predicting and measuring the carbon impact of each step of the design process, providing engineers with real-time CO2-emissions information that can be taken into account during decision-making.


The aim is to demonstrate during the session how CARBONTRACKER can:

•help Engineers to perform low carbon design,

•help project delivery teams to have all the required information to drive CO2 trajectory and meet CO2 reduction objectives,

•help Clients and Project Management Consultants to set an ambitious CO2 Baseline and monitor their achievement during all design stages and across the supply chain.


Unified Workflows: Connecting IFC to Design and Analysis

Andre Pereira - Digital Director, TTW, & Edward Dalton - Associate Director, Digital, TTW

Despite decades of development and research, maintaining data integrity in analysis, design, and documentation remains a significant challenge in the AECO sector. Engineers often begin their design journey with an architectural Building Information Model (BIM), which must be converted into formats suitable for simulation. This typical workflow frequently results in data loss and inconsistencies. Embracing standardised protocols like Industry Foundation Classes (IFC) and OpenBIM, while refining and optimising these processes, can greatly enhance the reliability and efficiency of the entire design and analysis workflow.


We developed a sophisticated data management pipeline that captures, manages, associates, and converts different building digital assets. By adhering to IFC standards, we have significantly improved the efficiency and interoperability of our processes. We leverage existing geometry (both basic and detailed representations) and metadata to enhance efficiency and minimise design discrepancies. In this presentation, we will illustrate how this platform can be used to streamline structural design.


Our integration with BIM and IFC allows us to capture both detailed geometry and idealised centreline representations. Our pipeline also automates the specification of structural types, cross-sectional properties, and materials, enabling accurate and automated mapping of metadata.

Engineers and operators have the flexibility to intercept the pipeline at any stage to incorporate their design assumptions and bespoke requirements. This process is facilitated by platforms that cater to their strengths, whether it's structural analysis software or tools like Rhino/Grasshopper, which offer powerful parametric modelling capabilities. 


Throughout the design process, it is crucial to synchronise any revisions or structural specifications with the architect. By leveraging their model as the basis for ours, we establish an architectural-to-structural design mapping at the individual element level. This framework enables direct communication of updates, fostering efficient collaboration between disciplines.  


Ultimately, our end-to-end platform enhances data fidelity and cross-disciplinary collaboration, ensuring seamless integration and real-time updates between design and analysis. This approach not only minimises discrepancies but also contributes to more reliable and efficient project delivery.

Navigating openBIM and ISO 19650 on a large scale, multi-platform project

Maciej Wypych (Modmation)

This case study provides a comprehensive analysis of the ongoing development of the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) Contemporary project, emphasizing its innovative and technologydriven approach. In alignment with ISO 19650 standards and guided by the principles of the Victorian Digital Asset Strategy (VDAS), the NGV Contemporary exemplifies the integration of multi-platform technologies, including Revit and ArchiCAD, within a comprehensive Common Data Environment (CDE) comprising the Autodesk Construction Cloud (ACC) and Aconex. NGV Contemporary, while still under development, represents a transformative addition to Melbourne's cultural landscape. It will be a landmark new gallery that celebrates the central role of art and design in contemporary life and culture. With up to 10,000 square metres of exhibition space, it will be one of the largest purpose-built museums of contemporary art and design in the Southern Hemisphere. Located in the heart of the transformed Melbourne Arts Precinct, NGV Contemporary will amplify Melbourne's leadership position as a global centre of architectural excellence, art, design, and creative innovation. Central to the success of the NGV Contemporary project is its openBIM approach. This open and collaborative Building Information Modeling (BIM) methodology fosters transparency, interconnectivity, and information sharing across various design and construction software platforms. It allows stakeholders to seamlessly exchange data, ensuring that all aspects of the project, from architectural design to construction planning and management, are integrated efficiently. In this case study, we explore into the details of NGV Contemporary's multi-platform, openBIM approach. We examine how ISO 19650 compliance and the strategic use of openBIM support the ongoing design and construction of this remarkable gallery. The project highlights the potential for openBIM to serve as a catalyst for streamlined project management, cost efficiency, and enhanced collaboration among stakeholders in the creation of cultural landmarks. The NGV Contemporary project showcases not only the capabilities of openBIM but also the power of collaborative technology in transforming cultural landscapes and advancing digital project delivery. 

Closing & Networking Event

Agenda

Venue

University of Technology Sydney (UTS) Aerial Function Centre and Labs

Day 1 is hosted at UTS Computing Labs at the Faculty of Engineering & IT and will close with a networking session. Classes will be capped at 60 participants.

Day 2 will utilise the Aerial Function Centre. Capacity will be approximately 200 attendees based on proposed configuration.

2m x 2m exhibition spaces will be provided amongst the area attendees will have lunch and networking drinks (*no. of spaces to be confirmed and subject to availability).

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