User Guide for Geo-referencing in IFC
Anwendungsfall Dokumentdefinition
Management-Zusammenfassung
The User Guide for Geo-referencing in IFC is aimed at all building/ infrastructure/ built asset modellers, to robustly establish the guiding model set-out parameters - map location and site configuration - for their respective asset (BIM or Digital Engineering) models. The User Guide therefore defines a standardised way for setting up a multi-disciplinary geo-referenced project model using the IFC open standard format data. The document also defines a standard way of incorporating Cadastral data as a starting point for representing land legal ownership, zoning and planning data. The document focusses on the geo-referencing issue and in the appendices demonstrates an example site imported and exported in IFC2x3 and IFC4 format embedding the geo-referencing data.
bSI maturity level
Following review and update, this version 2.0 of the technical report has been re-structured as a User Guide and published in January 2020 by the buildingSMART International Building Room and buildingSMART Australasia.
The original version of the report was published in August 2018 with the title Model Setup IDM (Information Delivery Manual).
Opportunities addressed and created value
Initial discussions with industry identified the lack of knowledge with regards to georeferencing and the strong interest in this subject in the user base in Australia. Discussions during the project confirmed the global status of this topic, including lack of knowledge in users, and, for advanced infrastructure users, the necessity of the approach set out in the User Guide.
What has been done?
The project has been presented at several bSI International Summits and meetings which elicited strong support for this approach in linear infrastructure projects. In particular, at the Tokyo bSI Summit the project was presented as part of the Building Room agenda and received considerable support including that from a study undertaken in Germany. A Swedish academic paper has also reviewed the proposals and the project value was further highlighted in the Tokyo bSI Summit Final Plenary.
Who has contributed?
Key project team members responsible for mapping expert knowledge, trial implementations and providing key contributions include:
Consensus process
We have had extensive consultation throughout the project with over 40 individuals participating overall. Thank you to all. Material from a Norwegian IFG project was reviewed to provide an input at the start of the project.
There have been at least three separate discussions with the bSI Implementation Support Group (ISG). The bSI Model Support Group (MSG) and representatives from the bSI Technical Room have reviewed and provided feedback on several occasions.
Software testing
Trial implementations have been undertaken by ArchiCAD (beta interface), and by Tekla. Listech (a member of the of the Hexagon Group) have implemented in both IFC2x3 and IFC4 and this has been used as the basis of the Demo Scenario in Appendix A.
Further recommendations
This User Guide is a useful addition to the schema and will have direct international benefit by allowing much greater reliability for collaborative model sharing.
There are some issues to be reviewed by bSI MSG and/or ISG:
- A strong recommendation from Listech and 12D was to allow for the storing of the Helmert 2D paired coordinate points, which would allow Surveyors carrying out transformations to assess the accuracy of the process.
- Some ISG/Technical members were not clear whether this data was associated with the ifcProject or ifcSite entities. The recommendation is to be with ifcSite.
Implementation of this approach in IFC4 is also recommended. Vendor software certification also needs to be addressed.
Contact
- For questions or specific feedback on the User Guide, please contact John Mitchell buildingSMART Australasia
- For more general queries and for access to the User Guide document please contact buildingSMART International
Beschreibung
Demonstration Scenariofor Model Setup IDM
- This document gives a stepwise introduction how to Setup Geo-referencing in a Building or Linear Infrastructure Model
Model Setup IDM_Geo-referencing BIM
- This document is aimed at all building or infrastructure (generically built asset) modellers, to robustly establish the guiding model set-out parameters - map location and site configuration – for their particular asset model.
Model Setup IDM_Geo-referencing in IFC
- This document is aimed at all building or infrastructure (generically built asset) modellers, to robustly establish the controlling model set-out parameters - map location and site configuration - for their respective asset (BIM or Digital Engineering) models.
Lebenszyklusphasen
Standards / Referenzdokumente
- ISO 19650-1:2018Organization and digitization of information about buildings and civil engineering works, including building information modelling (BIM) — Information management using building information modelling — Part 1: Concepts and principles
- ISO 19650-2:2018Organization and digitization of information about buildings and civil engineering works, including building information modelling (BIM) — Information management using building information modelling — Part 2: Delivery phase of the assets
Dateien
Process
Prozessdiagramm
ISO 22263
Overview
The primary concept detailed below is the creation of a digital BIM template or skeleton of a proposed or to be modified asset, that needs to be shared amongst the now common, many specialists in the implementation of modern facility developments. Its function is to give a precise description of the site and its location for local, GPS and geo-referencing, and a framework for the set-out and spatial configuration of the built asset. The model setup task can occur at different stages of a project, depending on the type of owner (i.e. developer versus say a public hospital agency), or infrastructure context where the setup may be a different and more important priority. In the Scenarios below we specify some obvious examples but recognise specific projects may be in a different sequence or priority.
Project Roles
A Client (or owner, public or private) we consider has two generic choices; a common development path where the asset is speculative and intended for resale and no further interest in the built asset; or an owner who has a long term ownership of a portfolio of properties (such as a University campus, hospital complex, commercial office space provider, or a transport facility such as an airport or road network) where the agency etc has an ongoing operational or maintenance responsibility.
In this latter case a Facility Manager (or Building Manager) may perform the role, and there is the likelihood that a well documented asset (master) plan comprising full surveys and particularly in infrastructure, map referencing & geo-location have been established. A project brief issued by such client organisation may have done a significant amount of preplanning, and in the special cases of the extension or integration of an existing asset, refurbishment or renovation may be wholly responsible for the model set-out.
A Lead Designer may be an Architect, Engineer, Landscape planner, Project Manager or an Advisor. They have the role to define the specific location of the asset on a site, to define its spatial nature and extent of the asset(s) and to provide an overall asset concept. For the model set-out the naming and broad spatial geometrical framework are the essence of the exchanged data. Often this information may be adjusted or refined during the Inception and Feasibility life-cycle phases. The model set-out may change during early project stages, but will be frozen once detailed design, documentation or construction phases commence.
A Land Surveyor is responsible for undertaking the detailed site survey, accessing and confirming cadastral and title particulars, and for developing a site model. Traditionally these data would be in a 2D drawing; in the Model Setup IDM this information is a component of the asset digital model, focussing on the description of the site, nature of the terrain, geology, natural features, climate zone, and often government Planning aspects such as land use types, development controls, easements etc. as well as adjoining site and existing or proposed built asset relationships.
A Land Registry is responsible for the description of Cadastre and Land Title (ownership) its key activities. This defines the boundaries of lots or parcels of land under private, Crown or government ownership. Cadastral data is currently a 2D description (with varying national standards) but is moving to a 3D description firstly to describe strata title (where an owner has multiple parts of a generally multi-storey building (eg a car space, apartment space(s) and an access space). However this 3D spatial context is also present in subterranean developments and also transport systems (roads, railways…) which overlap in the airspace. A Council (or Local Government or Authority, Borough, Commune, Planning Department etc) has the role of controlling the types of development within its boundaries. Such Zoning and Development controls limit the types and scope of built assets or activities that can be provided.
Terms and Concepts
- A project Site is defined as one or more contiguous land parcels. In this context, a site is mapped directly to the ifcSite entity, and represents the legal land boundary.
- A Lot is a type of land parcel, and the term used to describe the boundaries of legal ownership of land, often described as the Cadastral data. Lot types apply to roads, standard lots, strata, railways.
- A land improvement is any type of alteration to the land to make it more usable (and enhance its value.
- An Easement is a section of land registered on your property title, which gives someone the right to use the land for a specific purpose even though they are not the land owner, such as a route for an underground water main (preventing coverage, etc) or the right of other individuals to pass through the site for access etc.
- A Project is initiated by a client to construct (or modify) an Asset using collaborative federated discipline BIM models. An Asset model is any of a building, railway, road, waterway, tunnel, open space, or utility type.
- A large site is typically the context for infrastructure or linear assets (such as roads or railways) and will be in the order of tens to hundreds of km in length, and about 1 km or less in width. A small site is common for buildings or vertical assets, where the geographic extent is up to approximately 1km square.
- Above this “small” limit requires geo-referencing transformation for measurement accuracy, and mapping and GPS compatibility.
- A benchmark is a surveyor's mark made on a stationary object of previously determined position and elevation and used as a reference point, as in geologic surveys or tidal observations
Performance Requirement
2.1 Define Project Scope
The Client specifies the type of asset to be developed, the design brief and the site information on which the asset is located.
2.2 Analyse Client Data
Following an analysis of the brief for the new asset, the Lead Consultant requests from the Land Surveyor a survey be undertaken of the project site.
2.3 Develop Design Concept
The Lead Consultant develops a design concept for the chosen site in accordance with the Client Brief, and authoritative site information.
2.4 Finalise Small Asset Design Concept
In the case of a project with a master design (linear infrastructure, large asset development) model in Eastings/Northings coordinates, a small site model in Cartesian coordinates and appropriate Helmert transformation for a local Asset design model is requested from the Land Surveyor. Design Team members may/will provide design and configuration information for the chosen site setout (including local origin, rotation and elevation) and their data is integrated with the design model. This may take multiple iterations to achieve the final project configuration. The (adjusted) small site model from the Land Surveyor is integrated with the design model and a final design prepared.
2.5 Finalise Large Asset Design Concept
The Lead Consultant receives from the Land Surveyor a large site model in Eastings/Northings coordinates and develops a final design collaborating with other design Team members who may/will provide design and configuration information for the chosen site setout.
2.6 Final Model Setup
The Lead consultant finalises the asset model setup integrating the surveyor’s model of the site, and sets a framework for the setout and spatial configuration of the proposed asset design.
This comprises:
- defining the cadastre, urban context, terrain, and site elements
- setting the project local origin & grids and/or alignment
- defining paper North for documentation
- defining model orientation/location for export
- defining vertical (e.g. storeys) and/or horizontal zoning (e.g. infra-structure segments, project sub-zones)
- creating IFC high level entity structure (ifcProject, ifcSite, ifcBuilding, ifcBuildingStorey, ifcSpace) & GUIDs for collaboration synchronisation
For a small site, the Lead Consultant will validate the geo-reference
2.7 Establish Legal Land Context
The Land Surveyor reviews the Client brief and submits an application to the Land Registry to obtain a copy of the Land Title(s) and cadastral data for the Lot(s).
2.8 Create Small Site model
Based on the Title and cadastral information, the Surveyor undertakes an on-site survey, proving the Lot boundaries, an as-built survey to capture existing buildings, terrain, site features, identification of easements, existing improvements, utilities, structures and other features of the property and it's surrounds. Identifiable points, such as the corners of the property will assume local coordinates based on the site model.
2.9 Define Geo-reference
The Land Surveyor conducts a control survey to connect the site to survey marks with known coordinates in the Eastings/Northings grid coordinate system. The Surveyor uses the coordinates of the identifiable points to compute a Helmert transformation for the local site model and inserts the geo-referencing data
2.10 Define Height Datum
The Land Surveyor adds the reference to the National Height Datum to be used and adds the height shift relative to the model's origin point (benchmark) and local height.
2.11 Create Large Site model
Based on the Title and cadastral information, the Surveyor creates a site model for the linear or large asset based on Eastings/Northings coordinates. As needed the Surveyor undertakes lot surveys, identifies benchmarks, proving boundaries, identifying site features, identification of easements, existing improvements, utilities, structures and related matters.
2.12 Issue Land Title Documents
The Land Registry issues the Land Title documents, with Lot identification, cadastral boundaries, ownership and easement & related data.
2.13 Approve Project Setup
The Client approves the project model setup and work can commence for the next project phase to build a federated model
2.14 Issue Setup to Project Team
The Lead Consultant distributes the approved Model Setup for the project team to create the required discipline specific project models.
Dateien
Austauschanforderungen
Dateien
Impressum
Projektgruppe
- Bennett, Darren
- Brown, Neil
- Lee, Gregory
- Karlshoy, Jan
- Parslow, Peter
Urheberrecht
All documents are licensed as "Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License" as Attribution - non-commercial distribution - under the same conditions
For further information see: creativecommons
Handhabung
These documents do not claim to be complete. Nor are they to be understood in the sense of a recommendation or guideline that is generally valid from a legal point of view, but are intended to support the client and contractor in applying the BIM method. The use cases must be adapted to the specific project requirements. The examples given here do not claim to be complete. Information is based on practical experience and should therefore be regarded as best practice and not generally applicable. As we are in a phase in which definitions are only just emerging, buildingSMART cannot guarantee the accuracy of individual contents.
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