In light of Autodesk recently adding Ecotect to their portfolio of products, do Bentley have anything planned, or what would be their advice be in relation to using their products, with regard to assisting me (or a team of designers) in assessing the environmental impact and/or performance of a building project (or proposal)?
- building up a dataset that includes various environmental performance indicators or criteria?
- exporting my 3D model to .......... to what? would I have to keep re-exporting it? Is there some particular strategy or things I should do/don't do if I want to link my 3D model to some environmental analysis package/set up
- do they feel that a combination of the current main products (architecture, structural, M & E systems) is "delivered" (to the customers) in a manner that makes this reasonably approachable?
Regards
Danny Cooley
Freelance CAD technician
There is a very embrionic GC--> ecotect live interface. this still has some potential to be useful, but even if it never really goes anywhere, i'd still go with ecotect as my analysis package of choice.
unless you get a rash if you go near the big A, in which case, topical cream should solve it.
First http://www.bentley.com/en-US/Corporate/News/Quarter+1/Hevacomp.htm?skid=CEE_NA_COR_BN_76_080130&MIG=http:
Then http://www.reuters.com/article/pressRelease/idUS149469+30-Jun-2008+BW20080630
EDSL Tas is the second best of all the dynamic (FEA) thermal modellers - the others have also been bought up by CAD majors, except the acknowledged best, esp-R, which is still not married off. Hevacomp is useful too. Bentley have taken the crown jewels, this time. I await integration of these non-geometric parametrics into GC, with great interest
Edit: see my post 17 Dec 08 - it's not FEA
Hello ...
I must admit these are things I've heard of and am vaguely aware of (but only vaguely)
I had a browse around the Hevacomp web site and it would seem to be a very good move by Bentley. Though probably a fair bit too advance for myself, and I'd guess many people mainly working as architects (more for the M & E people I'd guess)
Tas looks very promising and I’ve heard good reports about it. Though again, probably a bit too advanced for myself at this stage.
Andreas: I'm glad you've had some good results/are pleased with the TAS products
"it shouldn't be any problem to use programs from different software companies" I wish I shared you're optimism on that one!
I might give it a go at some point. For the time being I guess I'll attempt some tweaking in Triforma/BA. Though that would seem like a long haul.
Most of the products/solutions available seem to mainly focus on HVAC related issues. Perhaps understandable as they were probably initially developed with that in mind. And no doubt the big issue of the moment
What about recycled content? Toxicity? Water re-use/recycling? Flexibility? Potential for disassembling/re-using parts of the building, or building component.
It would seem there is a reasonably clear path for assessing if your building (or proposal) complies with the various structural codes (give it to a structural engineer huh!), if it complies with various energy related issues/requirements (guess who you call then? those nice people who work in M&E). This can be done suffciently/adequately/impressively (take you're pick) with Bentley's current suite of products.
It would seem at the moment then the main thing to do with respect to environmental impact assessment would be to export your model to another package. But this will still entail some further re-modeling it would seem. I can accept that to some degree, as regardless of the package, I assume at some point you will have to "tell" it what you want to assess and where
From what bits I've seen (only playing around with the trial version briefly and then seeing a demo), for my more immediate purposes (and I would have though for architectural practices generally), Ecotect seem to be a few steps ahead of the other options. I was quite hopeful that there would be some more dynamic linking with dgn stuff in the pipeline. Though as this is now an Autodesk product, maybe they aren't in too much of a rush to develop things too much in that direction. Maybe the recent dgn/dwg agreement will prove to be fruitful. It may still be someway off before we see any significant benefits from that (next year?). As mentioned, I think I'll prod around with BA for the foreseeable future (some months probably) and see how that pans out before I attempt anything with any other products.
Anyway, …..
Thanks again
Freelance AEC CAD/BIM Technician Architecture, MEP & Structural ..... (& ex Low Carbon Consultant, ..... because they weren't that bothered!)
OBD Update 10, Windows 10 Pro, HP Z4-G4, 64Gb, Xeon 3.6GHz, Quadro M4000
AFAIK Ecotect isn't a FEA program - not a dynamic modeller which recalculates the whole again and again in small time steps. If not FEA, so-called thermal modellers are just basically spreadsheets that have been tweaked empirically to come close to the results of a proper FEA simulation - however good their front end looks. Unless FEA, they are only accurate within pre-conceived and verified limits, whereas a true FEA program is more 'do-anything' from first principles.True FEA modellers are Tas (UK), esp-r, (UK) Hot3000 (Canadian using esp-r as engine) and EIS (UK). Not sure about Hevacomp's, which is based on a US program, reputedly very slow
Hello Tom
Must admit "full" FEA is beyond myself at this point. I was tying to think along the lines of something that would allow me (or someone) to compile or "catalogue" various "eco-points" (depending on which environmental performance system they're using) as they are building up their model(s). I'm still more inclined to attemp this by building up a (Triforma) dataset, that includes various environmental performance factors/weightings than exporting the model(s) to various other apps for further analysis.
The idea being that in the same manner that you can extract a door schedule, areas schedule or various quantities (tons of concrete or whatever), you could then "scan" the model(s) and it would total up your score: ...... you have achieved 87 points which is the equivalent to BREEAM very good or Code for Sustainable Homes Level, 3, 4 or 5 (for example). I assume this would/could be output to a spreadsheet (or maye something more customised to your requirements) so that you could review the overall performance and see where you might be able to improve things or how to go about "trading off" various aspects of the design.
Must admit, I've only really started "playing" around with this (there's still stacks of other goodies to do things with!) so won't be able to provide any real results/feedback for some time (like next year at this rate ..... )
------------
Apparently now, Bentley own TAS ...........
http://www.bentley.com/en-US/Products/Bentley+Tas/
Seems to have slipped by quite quietly that one
This would seem like good news (for Microstation users particularly)
Looking forward to seeing what they come up with
<danny-cooley> wrote in message news:16303@communities.bentley.com... Hello Tom Must admit "full" FEA is beyond myself at this point. I was tying to think along the lines of something that would allow me (or someone) to compile or "catalogue" various "eco-points" (depending on which environmental performance system they're using) as they are building up their model(s). I'm still more inclined to attemp this by building up a (Triforma) dataset, that includes various environmental performance factors/weightings than exporting the model(s) to various other apps for further analysis. The idea being that in the same manner that you can extract a door schedule, areas schedule or various quantities (tons of concrete or whatever), you could then "scan" the model(s) and it would total up your score: ....... you have achieved 87 points which is the equivalent to BREEAM very good or Code for Sustainable Homes Level, 3, 4 or 5 (for example). I assume this would/could be output to a spreadsheet (or maye something more customised to your requirements) so that you could review the overall performance and see where you might be able to improve things or how to go about "trading off" various aspects of the design. Must admit, I've only really started "playing" around with this (there's still stacks of other goodies to do things with!) so won't be able to provide any real results/feedback for some time (like next year at this rate ...... ) ------------ Apparently now, Bentley own TAS ........... http://www.bentley.com/en-US/Products/Bentley+Tas/ Seems to have slipped by quite quietly that one This would seem like good news (for Microstation users particularly) Looking forward to seeing what they come up with Regards Danny Cooley Freelance CAD technician http://communities.bentley.com/Products/Building/Building_Analysis___Design/f/5917/t/8684.aspx#16303
The idea being that in the same manner that you can extract a door schedule, areas schedule or various quantities (tons of concrete or whatever), you could then "scan" the model(s) and it would total up your score: ....... you have achieved 87 points which is the equivalent to BREEAM very good or Code for Sustainable Homes Level, 3, 4 or 5 (for example). I assume this would/could be output to a spreadsheet (or maye something more customised to your requirements) so that you could review the overall performance and see where you might be able to improve things or how to go about "trading off" various aspects of the design.
Must admit, I've only really started "playing" around with this (there's still stacks of other goodies to do things with!) so won't be able to provide any real results/feedback for some time (like next year at this rate ...... )
regards / Thomas Voghera
Thomas V, that's a good article from 'few years ago' . But Danny, is that what you meant? Seems Thomas is talking about embodied energy of building components, which can be simply totalled.
If you're talking about energy in use, that surely can't be assessed that way. Yes the physics attributes of individual components, as well as their geometry (shape and relative position) can be very neatly input as part of a BIM model, rather than manually addfing the physics attributes to the geometry within Tas or whatever. But the physics result (thermal behaviour) depends on the interplay between them and weather changes, sun path etc, which no BIM is capable of - yet.
A FEA program like Tas recalculates the way that heat is passed from one component (or part of a composite component) to another, time and again, iteratively, in small time steps. We have to look forward to Tas's capabilities being added to Microstation or BA.
What's interesting beyond that, is the possibility of those physics attributes and the Tas capability becoming something that GC could handle, with non-geometric parameters (the physics attributes, weather changes, sun path etc) allowed to play just like geometric ones, governed by rules (Tas's algoriths, you might call it) to automatically generate thermally optimised buildings. I'm sure that fantastic possibility is what Bentley sees in Tas, and with Hevacomp they have access to another thermal modeller as well.
Presumably at heart GC is already a kind of FEA program, if it recalculates time and again in small steps. The time dimension (Thomas's 4d) is already here!
There's discussion about this on the Green Building Forum http://www.greenbuildingforum.co.uk/newforum/comments.php?DiscussionID=1427&page=3#Item_21