Awards: 2005 Institute Honor Award for Architecture
Recipient: Salmela Architect
Project: Emerson Sauna; Duluth, Minn.
Client: Peter & Cindy Emerson; Duluth, Minn.
Photo: Peter Bastianelli Kerze
 

   
 
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Full House for Change the World: Harnessing BIM Technology and Integrated Project Delivery for Sustainable Design

 

A sold-out audience of 350 attended AIA Technology in Architectural Practice’s annual conference, Change the World, presented with the support of the AIA Integrated Project Delivery Discussion Group, the AIA Committee on the Environment and the AIA Center for Building Science and Performance May 13 – 14, 2008 in Boston.

Over 60 speakers shared their expertise and 5 bloggers provided simultaneous commentary that has sparked an ongoing online conversation. To view or download the presentations or engage in the blog, please visit: http://www.aia.org/tap_2008_confscedule.

Content was organized into four tracks:

  • Toward an Integrated Academic Curriculum and Lifelong Professional Learning
  • Building, Analysis and New Materials for Green Results
  • Processes and Tools for a Sustainable Profession
  • The BIM Value Proposition

Plenary sessions highlighted the knowledge facets of the event: Prof. Chuck Eastman gave the opening Keynote Address, entitled New Technologies for Designing and Constructing. Attorney Chris Noble chaired a lunchtime panel that discussed Integrated Project Delivery and particularly Project Alliances. A reception Tuesday evening honored Chuck Eastman (Georgia Tech) and Paul Teicholz (Stanford University, Emeritus), two academics who have researched, taught and written about the evolution of computer technologies for design and construction for four decades. They are co-authors, with Kathleen Liston and Rafael Sacks, of the recently published, must-read BIM Handbook : A Guide to Building Information Modeling for Owners, Managers, Designers, Engineers, and Contractors (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2008, ISBN: 978-0-470-18528-5), the first comprehensive and authoritative book on the subject.

On the second day, Kimon Onuma led attendees in an abbreviated BIM Storm Eco, allowing them to experience first-hand a web-enabled collaborative urban design charrette. At lunch, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)’s Richard King, Director of the Solar Decathlon, presented outstanding entries into recent Solar Decathlon competitions (http://www.solardecathlon.org/), tying together the conference themes of integrated curriculum, building performance and sustainability. The Solar Decathlon, sponsored by DOE, joins 20 college and university teams in a competition to design, build, and operate the most attractive and energy-efficient solar-powered house, which they erect on the Mall in Washington, DC. 2007 Winner was the Technische Universtät Darmstadt (see photo).



Calvin Kam, Ph.D., LEED AP, who served a Dean of the TAP Bloggers for Change the World, wrapped up the conference with comments by the bloggers, an Open Forum and discussion of the path forward for the TAP KC.

The 4th Annual BIM Awards ceremony and reception immediately followed. See related article on the 2008 BIM Awards in this issue of EDGES.

TAP wishes to acknowledge and thank the sponsors who made Change the World possible:

  • Distinguished TAP 2008 Sponsor: Reed Construction Data
  • Diamond Conference Sponsor: Bentley
  • Gold Conference Sponsors: 
           American Institute of Steel Construction (AISC) 
           Graphisoft
           Newforma
           Tekla Corporation

To read Lachmi Khemlani’s review of Change the World, please visit: http://www.aecbytes.com/newsletter/2008/issue_35.html