915 resultados para Building Information Model
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Energy efficiency and user comfort have recently become priorities in the Facility Management (FM) sector. This has resulted in the use of innovative building components, such as thermal solar panels, heat pumps, etc., as they have potential to provide better performance, energy savings and increased user comfort. However, as the complexity of components increases, the requirement for maintenance management also increases. The standard routine for building maintenance is inspection which results in repairs or replacement when a fault is found. This routine leads to unnecessary inspections which have a cost with respect to downtime of a component and work hours. This research proposes an alternative routine: performing building maintenance at the point in time when the component is degrading and requires maintenance, thus reducing the frequency of unnecessary inspections. This thesis demonstrates that statistical techniques can be used as part of a maintenance management methodology to invoke maintenance before failure occurs. The proposed FM process is presented through a scenario utilising current Building Information Modelling (BIM) technology and innovative contractual and organisational models. This FM scenario supports a Degradation based Maintenance (DbM) scheduling methodology, implemented using two statistical techniques, Particle Filters (PFs) and Gaussian Processes (GPs). DbM consists of extracting and tracking a degradation metric for a component. Limits for the degradation metric are identified based on one of a number of proposed processes. These processes determine the limits based on the maturity of the historical information available. DbM is implemented for three case study components: a heat exchanger; a heat pump; and a set of bearings. The identified degradation points for each case study, from a PF, a GP and a hybrid (PF and GP combined) DbM implementation are assessed against known degradation points. The GP implementations are successful for all components. For the PF implementations, the results presented in this thesis find that the extracted metrics and limits identify degradation occurrences accurately for components which are in continuous operation. For components which have seasonal operational periods, the PF may wrongly identify degradation. The GP performs more robustly than the PF, but the PF, on average, results in fewer false positives. The hybrid implementations, which are a combination of GP and PF results, are successful for 2 of 3 case studies and are not affected by seasonal data. Overall, DbM is effectively applied for the three case study components. The accuracy of the implementations is dependant on the relationships modelled by the PF and GP, and on the type and quantity of data available. This novel maintenance process can improve equipment performance and reduce energy wastage from BSCs operation.
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Supply chains have become an important focus for competitive advantage. The performance of a company increasingly depends on its ability to maintain effective and efficient relationships with its suppliers and customers. The extended enterprise (i.e. composed of several partners) needs to be dynamically formed in order to be agile and adaptable. According to the Digital Manufacturing paradigm, companies have to be able to quickly share and disseminate information regarding planning, designing and manufacturing of products. Additionally, they must be responsive to all technical and business determinants, as well as be assessed and certified for guaranteed performance. The current research intends to present a solution for the dynamic composition of the extended enterprise, formed to take advantage of market opportunities quickly and efficiently. A construction model was developed. This construction model consists of: information model, protocol model and process model. The information model has been defined based on the concepts of Supply Chain Operations Reference model (SCOR®). In this model is defined information for negotiating the participation of candidate companies in the dynamic establishment of a network for responding to a given demand for developing and manufacturing products, in seven steps as follows: request for information; request for qualification; alignment of strategy; request for proposal; request for quotation; compatibility of process; and compatibility of system. The protocol model has been elaborated and inspired in the OSI, this model provides a framework for linking customers and suppliers, indicates a sequence to be followed, in order to selecte companies to become suppliers. The process model has been implemented by means of process modeling according to the BPMN standard and, in turn, implemented as a web-based application that runs the process through its several steps, which uses forms to gather data. An application example in the context of the oil and gas industry is used for demonstrating the solution concept.
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Dissertação (mestrado)—Universidade de Brasília, Faculdade de Tecnologia, Departamento de Engenharia Civil e Ambiental, 2016.
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The written text, and approaches to reading it, serves well as an analogy for the classroom space as a “text” that teachers are able to compose; and students are able to read, interpret meaning(s) of, and make responses to and about (Rosenblatt, 1988). Researchers point to ways in which the classroom can be conceptualized as a text to be evoked, experienced, and read (Freire & Macedo, 1987; Powell, 2009; Rosenblatt, 1988; Spears-Bunton & Powell, 2009). The present study analyzed secondary data including: 10 transcripts of teacher talks and six self-reports retrieved from the program evaluation archives of DOR Foundation. The data described six teachers’ classroom experiences subsequent to professional development centered on Goma character education curriculum that was used during a summer youth program located in South Georgia. Goma, an acronym that stands for Goal, Objective, Method, and Attitude, is a character education paradigm derived from The Inclusive Community Building Ellison Model, the theoretical framework used for this study. The Model identifies conflict resolution as one of its five foci (Hunt, Howard, & Rice, 1998). Hunt (2006) conceived Goma as part of a 7-Step unitary process, also named the 7-Step pathway, to demonstrate how conflict resolution is accomplished within a variety of contexts. Analysis of the data involved: (a) a priori coding of teacher talks transcripts using the components of the Goma 7-Step pathway as coding categories, (b) emergent coding of teacher talks transcripts for the types of experiences teachers evidenced, and (c) emergent coding of teachers’ self-reports for categories of teachers’ instructional activities. Results of the study showed positive influence of Goma curriculum on participating teachers and their instructional practices. Teachers were shown to have had cognitive, instructional, emotional, and social experiences that were most evident when they reported changes in their attitudes toward their students, themselves, and their instructional practices. The present study provided implications for classroom teachers wherein all aspects of teachers’ instructional practices can be guided by principles of positive character; and can be used to help compose the kinds of “texts” that may likely contribute to a classroom character culture.
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Building Information Modelling is changing the design and construction field ever since it entered the market. It took just some time to show its capabilities, it takes some time to be mastered before it could be used expressing all its best features. Since it was conceived to be adopted from the earliest stage of design to get the maximum from the decisional project, it still struggles to adapt to existing buildings. In fact, there is a branch of this methodology that is dedicated to what has been already made that is called Historic BIM or HBIM. This study aims to make clear what are BIM and HBIM, both from a theoretical point of view and in practice, applying from scratch the state of the art to a case study. It had been chosen the fortress of San Felice sul Panaro, a marvellous building with a thousand years of history in its bricks, that suffered violent earthquakes, but it is still standing. By means of this example, it will be shown which are the limits that could be encountered when applying BIM methodology to existing heritage, moreover will be pointed out all the new features that a simple 2D design could not achieve.
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Questa tesi di laurea si pone l’obiettivo di investigare alcune delle nuove frontiere offerte dalla crescita sincretica e multidisciplinare dei linguaggi digitali applicati all’architettura e ai beni culturali. Si approfondiranno i concetti teorici fondamentali dell’informazione digitale: il web semantico come ambiente di scambio, i metadata come informazioni sui dati, i LOD (Link Open Data) come standard e fine. Per l’ambito dei beni culturali verranno presentati i temi di ricerca e sviluppo nel campo della catalogazione e fruizione digitali: ontologie, dizionari normalizzati aperti, database (Catalogo Digitale), etc. Per l’ambito edilizio-architettonico verrà introdotto l’Heritage Building Information Modeling (HBIM) semantico come metodologia multidisciplinare focalizzata su rilievo geometrico, modellazione, archiviazione e scambio di tutte le informazioni utili alla conoscenza e conservazione dei beni storici. Il punto d’incontro tra i due mondi è individuato nella possibilità di arricchire le geometrie attraverso la definizione di una semantica (parametri-metadati) relazionata alle informazioni (valori-dati) presenti nei cataloghi digitali, creando di fatto un modello 3D per architetture storiche con funzione di database multidisciplinare. Sarà presentata la piattaforma web-based Inception, sviluppata dall’omonima startup incubata come spinoff dall’Università di Ferrara, che, tra le diverse applicazioni e potenzialità, verrà utilizzata come strumento per la condivisione e fruizione, garantendo la possibilità di interrogare geometrie e metadati in continuità con i principi LOD. Verrà definito un workflow generale (procedure Scan2BIM, modellazione geometrica, definizione script per l’estrazione automatica dei dati dal Catalogo Digitale, associazione dati-geometrie e caricamento in piattaforma) successivamente applicato e adattato alle precise necessità del caso studio: la Chiesa di S. Maria delle Vergini (MC), su commissione dell’ICCD referente al MiBACT.
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Nel seguente elaborato di tesi è stato approfondito il tema dell’interoperabilità da software BIM a FEM nell’ambito degli edifici a parete in legno. L’utilizzo di programmi di Building Information Modeling si è affermato in maniera crescente nel mondo delle costruzioni. Infatti, la possibilità di costruire modelli tridimensionali della struttura, che associano ad ogni elemento presente nell’opera tutte le informazioni utili ai fini della sua, realizzazione (quali geometrie, costi, proprietà meccaniche, fasi d’impiego, ecc..) permette di accorciare notevolmente il tempo di progettazione e costruzione, diminuendo gli errori dovuti alla trasmissione dei dati tra le varie figure professionali. Nel campo delle costruzioni, l’elemento “parete in legno” non è ancora presente all’interno dei principali software BIM. Per questo motivo, è stato necessario, per lo svolgimento del presente progetto di tesi, uno studio dei principali parametri meccanici descrittivi del reale comportamento in opera delle pareti in legno. Tali parametri sono stati calcolati secondo i due principali metodi esistenti nell’ambito delle costruzioni in legno: il metodo fenomenologico e il metodo per componenti. Nel primo caso, l’influenza sul comportamento delle pareti da parte delle connessioni metalliche viene calcolata sotto forma di parametri meccanici equivalenti. Nel secondo metodo, invece, il comportamento in opera della parete risulta essere la conseguenza dell’interazione tra la rigidezza della parete stessa e quella delle connessioni, che vengono modellate come dei vincoli equivalenti. Al fine di validare i risultati ottenuti, si è proceduto ad applicare i parametri equivalenti a due casi studio. Il primo caso è rappresentato da una parete semplice (3.2m x 3.75m) sottoposta ad una forza concentrata in sommità. Successivamente è stato studiato il caso di un edificio a parete di legno di tre piani, sottoposto ai carichi di un edificio adibito a civile abitazione.
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The newly inaugurated Navile District of the University of Bologna is a complex created along the Navile canal, that now houses various teaching and research activities for the disciplines of Chemistry, Industrial Chemistry, Pharmacy, Biotechnology and Astronomy. A Building Information Modeling system (BIM) gives staff of the Navile campus several ways to monitor buildings in the complex throughout their life cycle, one of which is the ability to access real-time environmental data such as room temperature, humidity, air composition, and more, thereby simplifying operations like finding faults and optimizing environmental resource usage. But smart features at Navile are not only available to the staff: AlmaMap Navile is a web application, whose development is documented in this thesis, that powers the public touch kiosks available throughout the campus, offering maps of the district and indications on how to reach buildings and spaces. Even if these two systems, BIM and AlmaMap, don't seem to have many similarities, they share the common intent of promoting awareness for informed decision making in the campus, and they do it while relying on web standards for communication. This opens up interesting possibilities, and is the idea behind AlmaMap Navile 2.0, an app that interfaces with the BIM system and combines real-time sensor data with a comfort calculation algorithm, giving users the ability not just to ask for directions to a space, but also to see its comfort level in advance and, should they want to, check environmental measurements coming from each sensor in a granular manner. The end result is a first step towards building a smart campus Digital Twin, that can support all the people who are part of the campus life in their daily activities, improving their efficiency and satisfaction, giving them the ability to make informed decisions, and promoting awareness and sustainability.
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La Tesi presenta un metodo per valutare il livello di reversibilità e circolarità dei componenti edili. Il concetto cardine dello studio è il Design for Disassembly (DfD), definibile come un approccio alla progettazione di organismi edilizi secondo criteri costruttivi volti a facilitare successivi cambiamenti e smantellamenti (completi o parziali), consentendo il riutilizzo dei componenti, al fine di ridurre l’impatto ambientale degli interventi. Attualmente, diverse ricerche in ambito scientifico si dedicano all’approfondimento di questa tematica, correlandola ad altri concetti come la metodologia del Building Information Modeling (BIM), che consente di digitalizzare il processo progettuale, la sua realizzazione e la sua gestione attraverso modelli. Dopo l’analisi dello stato dell’arte, il lavoro è giunto alla definizione di un insieme di parametri idonei per essere introdotti in un modello informativo, in grado di rappresentare la circolarità del componente in termini di DfD. Per ogni elemento del componente analizzato viene assegnato un valore numerico (variabile da 0,1 a 1) a ogni parametro. Tramite l’utilizzo di una formula elaborata nell’ambito di precedenti ricerche svolte dal Dipartimento di Architettura dell'Università di Bologna, opportunamente modificata, si ottiene un indice sintetico finale denominato “Express Building Circularity Indicators” (EBCI). Il metodo di analisi proposto come strumento a supporto del processo progettuale è stato validato tramite l’applicazione a diverse soluzioni di facciata per l’efficientamento energetico di un fabbricato selezionato come caso di studio italiano dal progetto Europeo Horizon 2020 "DRIVE 0 – Driving decarbonization of the EU building stock by enhancing a consumer centred and locally based circular renovation process". I risultati ottenuti hanno consentito di verificare la replicabilità del processo digitalizzato a diverse soluzioni costruttive e l’affidabilità del metodo di valutazione del grado di circolarità.
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Dissertação para a obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Electrotécnica Ramo de Energia
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Alumni are considered as precious resource of the institutions, thus improving alumni adminis-tration is critical. In information era, alumni administration is assisted by widespread information technology, such as social network sites. This paper aims to discover if a self-built information sys-tem would enhance alumni connection in the IMMIT context, and what kind of attributes would be helpful applying to the special context. The current online alumni services at other universities and at the IMMIT host university are analyzed, and then social media is introduced. After illustrating the social capital existing in IM-MIT, the type of the self-built information system is suggested, following an interpretation of the prototype. Two research models are utilized in this article: TAM and intentional social action model. The second model is adjusted with proposed parameters. Afterwards, a survey and an interview protocol are designed under the guidance of the models. The results are analyzed in several groups, and the proposed parameters are tested. A conclusion is drawn to indicate how to improve alumni‟s intention to use and how to achieve a better-accepted design.
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Modern buildings are designed to enhance the match between environment, spaces and the people carrying out work, so that the well-being and the performance of the occupants are all in harmony. Building services are systems that facilitate a healthy working environment within which workers productivity can be optimised in the buildings. However, the maintenance of these services is fraught with problems that may contribute to up to 50% of the total life cycle cost of the building. Maintenance support is one area which is not usually designed into the system as this is not common practice in the services industry. The other areas of shortfall for future designs are; client requirements, commissioning, facilities management data and post occupancy evaluation feedback which needs to be adequately planned to capture and document this information for use in future designs. At the University of Reading an integrated approach has been developed to assemble the multitude of aspects inherent in this field. The means records required and measured achievements for the benefit of both building owners and practitioners. This integrated approach can be represented in a Through Life Business Model (TLBM) format using the concept of Integrated Logistic Support (ILS). The prototype TLBM developed utilises the tailored tools and techniques of ILS for building services. This TLBM approach will facilitate the successful development of a databank that would be invaluable in capturing essential data (e.g. reliability of components) for enhancing future building services designs, life cycle costing and decision making by practitioners, in particular facilities managers.
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People's interaction with the indoor environment plays a significant role in energy consumption in buildings. Mismatching and delaying occupants' feedback on the indoor environment to the building energy management system is the major barrier to the efficient energy management of buildings. There is an increasing trend towards the application of digital technology to support control systems in order to achieve energy efficiency in buildings. This article introduces a holistic, integrated, building energy management model called `smart sensor, optimum decision and intelligent control' (SMODIC). The model takes into account occupants' responses to the indoor environments in the control system. The model of optimal decision-making based on multiple criteria of indoor environments has been integrated into the whole system. The SMODIC model combines information technology and people centric concepts to achieve energy savings in buildings.
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The solar and longwave environmental irradiance geometry (SOLWEIG) model simulates spatial variations of 3-D radiation fluxes and mean radiant temperature (T mrt) as well as shadow patterns in complex urban settings. In this paper, a new vegetation scheme is included in SOLWEIG and evaluated. The new shadow casting algorithm for complex vegetation structures makes it possible to obtain continuous images of shadow patterns and sky view factors taking both buildings and vegetation into account. For the calculation of 3-D radiation fluxes and T mrt, SOLWEIG only requires a limited number of inputs, such as global shortwave radiation, air temperature, relative humidity, geographical information (latitude, longitude and elevation) and urban geometry represented by high-resolution ground and building digital elevation models (DEM). Trees and bushes are represented by separate DEMs. The model is evaluated using 5 days of integral radiation measurements at two sites within a square surrounded by low-rise buildings and vegetation in Göteborg, Sweden (57°N). There is good agreement between modelled and observed values of T mrt, with an overall correspondence of R 2 = 0.91 (p < 0.01, RMSE = 3.1 K). A small overestimation of T mrt is found at locations shadowed by vegetation. Given this good performance a number of suggestions for future development are identified for applications which include for human comfort, building design, planning and evaluation of instrument exposure.
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Develop software is still a risky business. After 60 years of experience, this community is still not able to consistently build Information Systems (IS) for organizations with predictable quality, within previously agreed budget and time constraints. Although software is changeable we are still unable to cope with the amount and complexity of change that organizations demand for their IS. To improve results, developers followed two alternatives: Frameworks that increase productivity but constrain the flexibility of possible solutions; Agile ways of developing software that keep flexibility with less upfront commitments. With strict frameworks, specific hacks have to be put in place to get around the framework construction options. In time this leads to inconsistent architectures that are harder to maintain due to incomplete documentation and human resources turnover. The main goals of this work is to create a new way to develop flexible IS for organizations, using web technologies, in a faster, better and cheaper way that is more suited to handle organizational change. To do so we propose an adaptive object model that uses a new ontology for data and action with strict normalizing rules. These rules should bound the effects of changes that can be better tested and therefore corrected. Interfaces are built with templates of resources that can be reused and extended in a flexible way. The “state of the world” for each IS is determined by all production and coordination acts that agents performed over time, even those performed by external systems. When bugs are found during maintenance, their past cascading effects can be checked through simulation, re-running the log of transaction acts over time and checking results with previous records. This work implements a prototype with part of the proposed system in order to have a preliminary assessment its feasibility and limitations.