Journal of Information Technology in Construction
ITcon Vol. 11, pg. 607-626, http://www.itcon.org/2006/42
Managing and communicating information on the Stanford Living Laboratory feasibility study
submitted: | December 2005 | |
revised: | April 2006 | |
published: | July 2006 | |
editor(s): | Katranuschkov P | |
authors: | John Haymaker, Assistant Professor, Dr. Engin Ayaz, Undergraduate Student Martin Fischer, Associate Professor, Dr. Calvin Kam, Postdoctoral Scholar, Dr. John Kunz, Executive Director Center for Integrated Facility Engineering Marc Ramsey, Research Engineer Ben Suter, Research Engineer Mauricio Toledo, PhD Candidate Center for Integrated Facility Engineering, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University contact: haymaker@stanford.edu | |
summary: | AEC projects require multidisciplinary solutions. Today AEC professionals have formal methods to help them manage and communicate much of a single disciplines information; however, they lack formal methodologies to manage and communicate information and processes among multiple disciplines. As a result, AEC projects have difficulty quickly and accurately achieving their many objectives. We are designing and implementing three methodologies to help AEC professionals overcome these difficulties. Using our POP methodology AEC professionals can organize information models in terms of the functions, forms, and behaviours of the design products, organizations and processes. Using our Narrative methodology they can communicate and manage the integration of design processes by defining and controlling the dependencies between information models. Using our Decision Dashboard methodology, they can consider tradeoffs amongst options and document decisions. In this paper we present our application of these methods to case studies from the feasibility study of a Living Laboratory currently being designed at Stanford University. We discuss how these methodologies might enable AEC professionals to better manage and communicate their multidisciplinary design processes and information, and describe ongoing efforts to develop integrated software prototypes for these methodologies in an interactive workspace. | |
keywords: | process modelling, organization modelling, product modelling, narratives, decisions, integration. | |
full text: | (PDF file, 0.653 MB) | |
citation: | Haymaker J, Ayaz E, Fischer M, Kam C, Kunz J, Ramsey M, Suter B and Toledo M (2006). Managing and communicating information on the Stanford Living Laboratory feasibility study, ITcon Vol. 11, Special issue Process Modelling, Process Management and Collaboration, pg. 607-626, https://www.itcon.org/2006/42 |