Trust but verify. Itās a time-honored treaty enforcement principle. It also works well as a basic mantra for BIM (building information modeling)-based building construction. Just ask the Virtual Design & Construction (VDC) Team at Gilbane, a family-owned and operated construction company. Armed with a phase-shift laser scanner, a Gilbane VDC engineering team recently documented measurement discrepancies on a high-profile building construction project.
Gilbane specializes in the high-wire world of at-risk construction. On occasion, Gilbane is called in to rescue troubled projects. Recently the Gilbane VDC team was summoned to do just that. John Tocci, Jr., Director of the VDC Team sets the stage: āThe work involves a new corporate campus, the headquarters of a Fortune 500 company. For various reasons, the previous construction manager was terminated. That happened on a Friday. My team took over the job on Saturday. By Sunday afternoon we were laser scanning part of the project in order to reconcile measurements for Monday morning meetings.ā
Trade contractors desperately needed reliable benchmarks to accurately set walls, ducts, pipe, conduit locations, and other assemblies. Then there was the elevator shaft. Laser scanning verified two-inch variations on all sides, with the elevator opening three inches smaller than it should be. There was a new sheriff in town and the trades eventually rallied to the Gilbane VDC team.
A point cloud of modeled as-built conditions.
āWeāve had a number of cases where the field team, trade contractors, or architects have argued with us about dimensions of existing conditions, Tocci stated. āWeāve been right every time. It underscores the fact that BIM and VDC, no matter how established we think it is, is still an emerging technology.ā
As Gilbane discovered the anecdotal side of laser scanning pales in comparison to the dramatic ROI story. āOur first laser scanner paid for itself in the first week of operation,ā Tocci reports. āWe conservatively calculate we saved about $150,000 on the first project we scanned.ā Just one week? Understandably, that kind of near-instant payback may strike some as too good to be true. Believe it, says Tocci. āIf anyone wants to reverse engineer the calculations, theyāll quickly see the payback was actually quite larger,ā Tocci reports.
āWe assigned super-conservative values to all the ordinary construction tasks that scanning eliminates. We factor-in the electrical, mechanical, and plumbing packages on the job. āOne week understates it. With scanning, there are no back charges. No finger pointing. No remediation. Itās all because it was measured right the first time,ā Tocci says.
Like many risk-adverse businesses, Gilbane takes a careful, deliberate path to integrating new technology into their business. āThe Focus3D Laser Scanner changed the industry,ā Tocci declares. āWhen it came out it was three times less expensive than its competitors. Instead of capturing a single point at once, it can capture 978 million points per second. Thatās a radically different scenario. Itās so easy for one person to move it around. It captures levels of detail that you didnāt think it could. āItās an amazing tool. We now verify and find discrepancies that might bite us later on. All that risk goes away. We couldnāt be happier or more impressed,ā Tocci says.
More Information:
FARO Technologies
250 Technology Park
Lake Mary, FL 32746
Phone: 407-333-9911 | Fax: 407-333-4181
aec.faro.com
Ā
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