2021
DOI: 10.30880/ijscet.2021.12.01.027
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Barriers in BIM Adoption and the Legal Considerations in Vietnam

Abstract: Building Information Modelling (BIM), an emerging trend in the construction industry worldwide, has been officially introduced to Vietnam recently in some piloted projects. However, in Vietnam, the BIM market is still immature due to that the players in the construction industry have perceived many barriers in adopting this new solution. In a country with a civil law system like Vietnam, the legal environment is considered as the most important enabler for the construction industry to adopt innovative technolo… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 6 publications
(6 reference statements)
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“…Kekana et al (2014) researched in South African construction industry, and they were able to identify: the inability to use BIM, lack of professional responsibility, insurability, lack of BIM required skill, lack of collaborative working process and software-related issues as the major barriers facing South Africa construction industry. Durdyev et al (2021) researched in Cambodian focused on the construction industry and concluded that the most critical barriers are “issues related to strong industry resistance to change, especially reluctance to change from 2 D drafting to 3 D modeling, the high initial cost of the software and the shortage of professionals with BIM skills”; this is also in line with the findings of Nguyen and Nguyen (2021) conducted in Vietnam Asia. In the Indonesia construction industry content, VA Roy and Firdaus (2020) researched and found five critical barriers hindering the implementation of BIM: “lack of BIM training, lack of BIM experience and capability, no client demand, high cost in software and hardware acquisition, and inadequate information technology (IT) facilities”.…”
Section: Literature Reviewsupporting
confidence: 54%
“…Kekana et al (2014) researched in South African construction industry, and they were able to identify: the inability to use BIM, lack of professional responsibility, insurability, lack of BIM required skill, lack of collaborative working process and software-related issues as the major barriers facing South Africa construction industry. Durdyev et al (2021) researched in Cambodian focused on the construction industry and concluded that the most critical barriers are “issues related to strong industry resistance to change, especially reluctance to change from 2 D drafting to 3 D modeling, the high initial cost of the software and the shortage of professionals with BIM skills”; this is also in line with the findings of Nguyen and Nguyen (2021) conducted in Vietnam Asia. In the Indonesia construction industry content, VA Roy and Firdaus (2020) researched and found five critical barriers hindering the implementation of BIM: “lack of BIM training, lack of BIM experience and capability, no client demand, high cost in software and hardware acquisition, and inadequate information technology (IT) facilities”.…”
Section: Literature Reviewsupporting
confidence: 54%
“…It stands to reason then that a wide range of barriers stems from a lack of supportive procurement procedures and approaches Fan et al, 2018;Kuiper & Holzer, 2013), as discussed next. (Eadie et al, 2014;Ullah et al, 2019) Fragmented procurement approaches (El Hajj et al, 2021;Gurevich & Sacks, 2020) Increased risk and liability Khoshfetrat et al, 2020;Ragab & Marzouk, 2021) Lack of a comprehensive framework or implementation plan Olanrewaju et al, 2021b;Wang & Lu, 2021) Business and legal problems Lack of a legal framework (model ownership and legal contract) Gad et al, 2020;Malla et al, 2022;Nguyen, 2021) Lack of standards (Hadi, 2020;Tran-Hoang-Minh et al, 2021;Wu et al, 2021) Technical problems Lack of interoperability (Bouhmoud & Loudyi, 2021;El Hajj et al, 2021;Olugboyega & Windapo, 2021) Attitude and awareness (resistance to change from 2D drafting practices) (Durdyev et al, 2021;Evans & Farrell, 2020;Hamma-adama et al, 2020) Human/ organisational problems Complexity (long hours to develop a BIM model) (Alemayehu et al, 2021;Belay et al, 2021 (Durdyev et al, 2021;Faisal Shehzad et al, 2020;Olugboyega & Windapo, 2021) Employees lack BIM skills, education and training (design, engineers and subcontractors) (Pokusaev et al, 2021) (Hosseini et al, 2021) Organisational challenges among construction professionals (Ademci & Gundes, 2021;Farooq et al, 2020;Karampour et al, 2021) Construction Procurement: A precursor to BIM implementation Construction procu...…”
Section: Barriers To Bim Implementationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…That is why the government plays a leading role in promoting the implementation of BIM (Ilhan et al, 2013). The implementation of BIM in public works incorporates a variety of benefits and includes the following: technological benefits (Vasudevan, 2020), legal benefits (Nguyen et al, 2021), benefits from a process and people perspective (Siebelink et al, 2021).…”
Section: Critical Success Factors For Implementing Bim In Public Workmentioning
confidence: 99%