VGTU teachers participated at BIM Conference in London

December 18, 2014
On December 2, the delegation of JSC „Digital Construction“, led by Director Dalius Gedvilas, together with the task groups leaders for BIM development in Lithuania: Dr. Vladimiras Popovas, Dr. Vaidotas Šarka and Dr. Darius Migilinskas from Vilnius Gediminas Technical University (VGTU), Arvydas Čibirka, the Director of ‘‘Kelprojektas“ and Dainius Čergelis, the Senior Specialist of Environmental Ministry, participated at Building Information Modelling (BIM) Conference. The conference was organised by the British Standards Institution (BSI) in London.
In the UK, the State initiated and supported the implementation and development of digital construction and BIM methodology. The government has set out a strategy for the construction sector that envisions the implementation of BIM level by 2016: to deliver all centrally procured Government construction projects, using Building Information Modelling only. Since 2012, the country has already saved two billion euros, gradually implementing new technologies in large public building projects, and sixty six per cent of major projects have been completed on time and within budget, according to government‘s calculations.
The conference analysed the role of BIM for the country's infrastructure and real estate construction, focussing on the information requirements and design standards, construction and operation stages, promoting cooperation and structured data exchange. The Conference also covered the issues of teamwork psychology, communication culture in the BIM environment, concerning BIM security.
On December 3, the Lithuanian delegation met with BIM experts Nicholas Nisbet and Mervyn Richards, the BIM Task Group members of Great Britain at London office of Bentley Systems, Inc., the digital construction software company. The delegation also met with Greg Bentley, the Head of "Bentley Systems" corporation and David G Robinson, the Director of BIM Academy. During the working session, Andrius Nikitinas, Lithuanian Commercial Attaché to the United Kingdom, and Justas Belevičius, a Lithuanian, working as the team leader of Bentley programmers in London, joined our Lithuanian participants.
"The maturity of BIM made a tremendous impression on us – Great Britain is far advanced in the development of the BIM methodology country-wide. In the office of Bentley corporation, we noticed the professionalism of people, the desire to communicate and assist, as well as goodwill to educate, ‘‘– said Dalius Gedvilas, the President of the Lithuanian Association of Builders and the Director of JSC “Skaitmeninė statyba“. Addressing the benefits of BIM, he said that in the UK, they firstly focus on the speed and accuracy of decision-making, then on the ability of finding relevant data in the large stream of information, and most importantly – on the BIM efficiency and benefits, while applying BIM for the construction and infrastructure sector.
During the conference and meetings at Bentley office, VGTU representatives were mostly interested in the best practices that could be adapted at the Technology Center for Building Information and Digital Modelling of VGTU, designated for the development and promotion of building competencies, innovations, connected with the digital construction development, as well as transfer to market participants. A scientists group from seven VGTU faculties – Construction, Environmental Engineering, Architecture, Transport Engineering, Electronics, Mechanics and Basic Sciences is under creation at the center. They will provide business with scientific-practical services, coordinate the specialists training issues at the University on digital training, carry out the research and consult market participants.
"Great Britain is one of the world leaders in the development of BIM, so during our visit we had the first-hand opportunity to hear their successful digital construction story. After creating the environment for the BIM methodology, the Brits work consistently, improving it, and at the same time educating future market participants: universities are implementing the BIM study programs, developing the professional specialists‘ training and certification system intensively,"– said Dr. V. Popovas, the Director of Technology Center for Building Information and Digital Modelling of VGTU.
Many teachers of VGTU are also actively involved in the activities of JSC "Skaitmeninė statyba", providing suggestions on how to apply the practice of other countries within the University and nationally.
 

Galerija

Related news

Naujas VILNIUS TECH elektroninis leidinys
Naujas VILNIUS TECH elektroninis leidinys
We are pleased to present the new VILNIUS TECH electronic publication „Vilnius: nuo laukinių miškų iki Rojaus sodo“ („Vilnius: From Wild Forests to the Garden of Eden“), edited by Associate Professor Giedrė Ingrida Laukaitytė-Malžinskienė of the Department of Urban Design. The publication showcases the outcomes of the autumn semester project carried out by third-year students in the Landscape Architecture programme at the VILNIUS TECH Faculty of Architecture. The project comprises a comprehensive analysis of a historic area of Vilnius and its surrounding context, the development of a territorial strategy, and individual proposals for the preservation and future use of the site. “The title of the project – Vilnius: From Wild Forests to the Garden of Eden – reflects the clear conceptual framework that guided our analytical work. We explored the notion of wildness in Vilnius in relation to the city’s spiritual and cultural development. As future landscape architects, we examined how natural landscape elements, urban transformation, and political processes have shaped the evolution of Vilnius’s cultural landscape. Saviour’s Hill, the Garden of Eden, Rojaus Street, Blind Alley, Schwarz Tavern, the School for Noble Girls, K. Brzostowski’s golden heart, mysterious wells, the communities of the Jesuits, Missionaries, and Visitandine Order, the 1863 Uprising, Russification, Sovietisation, and other historical factors have all influenced the territory we investigated. The study area is located between Rasų, Subačiaus, Vitebsko, and Drujos streets. It includes the present-day grounds of the Visitandine Monastery and Church, the adjacent hospice, the grounds of the American School (occupying the site of former historic gardens), Vilnius Correctional Facility (also located within the former historic gardens), and the historical territory of the former Garden of Eden, which currently remains open and undeveloped. Each student develops and presents an individual interpretation of their own ‘Paradise’, while the collective outcome of the group project lies in identifying the historical constants of the site and revealing the strengths and future potential of this currently underused territory. The project involved analysing the historical development of the site, changes in topography, and vegetation patterns. Drawing on historical maps, texts, and works of art, we traced the relationships between historic buildings and former gardens, documented both surviving and lost heritage elements, explored patterns of life across different historical periods, and examined visual connections, compositional axes, existing and former urban structures, as well as concepts of ecclesiastical heritage — all of which are presented in this publication,” writes Associate Professor Giedrė I. Laukaitytė-Malžinskienė in the introductory section of the publication. Electronic book (in Lithuanian)  >>>  
More