Business
Expert Lists Gains Of BIM
A practitioner in the
building sector, and quantity surveyor, Okechukwu Ezeokoli, has said that the adoption of Building Information Model (BIM) in a project has redefined traditional professional boundaries in construction.
He said that for the Quantity Surveying Profession, BIM has the potential to automate measurements and facilitate the operation of accurate quantity take-off, which will reduce the time and cost required to estimate projects.
Ezeeokoli, who made this known at a public forum in Port Harcourt noted also that the housing sector is yet to fully utilise the BIM for estimating projects as at now.
According to him, BIM software is compatible with estimating software such as innovaya composer, which converts BIM files, making them compatible with Timberline’s estimate and quantity data.
“According to Gee (2010) BIM’s capabilities of automating the production of bills of quantities, which is one of the Quantity Surveying fundamental tasks will have both positive and negative effect on the Quantity surveying profession.
“BIM helps to eliminate time consuming process of manual quantity take-off duties of quantity surveying and some of its associated errors in respect to moving the data between files, risk of double counting, risk of missing elements and multiple 2D drawing themselves, are likely to contain many errors compounding the problem further,” he said.
Eze Okoli also maintained that the BIM tools provide an excellent opportunity for Quantity Surveyors to perform value management throughout design period, pointing out that the technology has tools capable of pperforming all the tasks of the traditional quantity surveying tasks from take off to cost control, value management and life cycle costing.
Corlins Walter
Business
Kenyan Runners Dominate Berlin Marathons
Kenya made it a clean sweep at the Berlin Marathon with Sabastian Sawe winning the men’s race and Rosemary Wanjiru triumphing in the women’s.
Sawe finished in two hours, two minutes and 16 seconds to make it three wins in his first three marathons.
The 30-year-old, who was victorious at this year’s London Marathon, set a sizzling pace as he left the field behind and ran much of the race surrounded only by his pacesetters.
Japan’s Akasaki Akira came second after a powerful latter half of the race, finishing almost four minutes behind Sawe, while Ethiopia’s Chimdessa Debele followed in third.
“I did my best and I am happy for this performance,” said Sawe.
“I am so happy for this year. I felt well but you cannot change the weather. Next year will be better.”
Sawe had Kelvin Kiptum’s 2023 world record of 2:00:35 in his sights when he reached halfway in 1:00:12, but faded towards the end.
In the women’s race, Wanjiru sped away from the lead pack after 25 kilometers before finishing in 2:21:05.
Ethiopia’s Dera Dida followed three seconds behind Wanjiru, with Azmera Gebru, also of Ethiopia, coming third in 2:21:29.
Wanjiru’s time was 12 minutes slower than compatriot Ruth Chepng’etich’s world record of 2:09:56, which she set in Chicago in 2024.
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