1999
DOI: 10.1016/s0926-5805(98)00073-9
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Product modeling standards for the building and construction industry: past, present and future

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Cited by 75 publications
(43 citation statements)
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“…DWG and DGN) are considered as fixed schemas, and accounting for the ever-expanding developments in various industries like piping, mechanical, electrical and other building systems in these formats would result in very large-size files and uninterpretable formats. Therefore, new initiatives emerged for domain-specific data exchange in the product model category which their overview has been provided by Tolman (1999) and Karimi and Akinci (2010). Some of these developments were later combined as part of a more comprehensive set of ISO standards.…”
Section: Developments In Aec/fm Domainmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…DWG and DGN) are considered as fixed schemas, and accounting for the ever-expanding developments in various industries like piping, mechanical, electrical and other building systems in these formats would result in very large-size files and uninterpretable formats. Therefore, new initiatives emerged for domain-specific data exchange in the product model category which their overview has been provided by Tolman (1999) and Karimi and Akinci (2010). Some of these developments were later combined as part of a more comprehensive set of ISO standards.…”
Section: Developments In Aec/fm Domainmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…ATLAS was funded in 1994 to develop semantic models for technical building projects with sizeable plant requirements (Tolman, 1999). This system addressed four layers of information -product, process, resource and control -but lacked support for versioning, user roles, recording of design intent and change notification (Rezgui et al, 1996).…”
Section: Atlas (Architecture Methodology and Tools For Computer-intementioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the resulting information transfers are often less robust in comparison, they provide a mechanism by which otherwise incompatible AEC software can be integrated (Watson, 2011). The Industry Foundation Classes (IFC) constitute one of the more heavily used of these standards, and perhaps the most well-known AEC derivative of the STEP framework (Boddy, et al, 2007;Tolman, 1999). This non-proprietary specification was first published in 1997 by the International Alliance for Interoperability (IAI) and is currently administered by the IAI's successor organisation, buildingSMART (Björk & Laakso, 2010;buildingSMART, 2013).…”
Section: Atlas (Architecture Methodology and Tools For Computer-intementioning
confidence: 99%
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