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EBIMS BIM & Digital Transformation

EBIMS BIM & Digital Transformation

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For BIM enthusiasts, information on BIM & Digital Transformation of the Construction sector in Ethiopia. How can we make it work. Discuss.

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منشورات القناة
Today marks an important step forward for the future of Ethiopia’s built environment. The Ethiopian BIM Society (EBIMS) and MIDROC Consulting Architects & Engineers PLC have signed a Memorandum of Understanding to strengthen collaboration around Building Information Modeling (BIM), knowledge sharing, and industry development. The MoU was signed by Eng. Kidase Kefybelu, General Manager of the Ethiopian BIM Society, and Dr. Leule Mebratie, General Manager of MIDROC Consulting Architects & Engineers PLC, reflecting a shared commitment to advancing digital transformation and innovation across the construction industry. This partnership is about more than a signed document. It is about building a stronger foundation for smarter project delivery, improved coordination, enhanced compliance, and greater innovation within Ethiopia’s construction and infrastructure sectors. Through this collaboration, both institutions will work together to support BIM adoption, develop practical guidance tailored to local needs, and promote professional excellence through shared learning and engagement. Meaningful progress happens when expertise, vision, and commitment come together. This MoU reflects exactly that. A shared vision. A stronger industry. A smarter future. #BIM #BuildingInformationModeling #ConstructionIndustry #InfrastructureDevelopment #DigitalConstruction #Innovation #Ethiopia #Engineering #Architecture #ProjectDelivery #KnowledgeSharing #IndustryCollaboration #MIDROC #EBIMS

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BIM & Digital Transformation Monday Tip – Week 17: Coordinate Early and Often Many project issues are not caused by design errors—they are caused by late coordination. Effective BIM coordination is a continuous process that brings disciplines together to identify, discuss, and resolve issues before they impact construction. The earlier teams coordinate, the lower the cost and effort required to resolve conflicts. To improve coordination, focus on: • Regular model reviews – Schedule periodic coordination sessions to review models and identify issues before major project milestones. • Multi-disciplinary collaboration – Encourage architects, structural engineers, MEP teams, and contractors to work together throughout the project lifecycle. • Early issue identification – Detect clashes, design conflicts, and information gaps before they become site problems. • Issue tracking and accountability – Assign actions, responsibilities, and deadlines to ensure identified issues are resolved efficiently. • Use a Common Data Environment (CDE) – Ensure all teams access the latest approved information from a single source of truth. Tools such as Autodesk Navisworks, Autodesk Construction Cloud, and Solibri help facilitate effective coordination workflows. This approach aligns with ISO 19650, which promotes collaborative working, structured information exchange, and coordinated project delivery. Good coordination prevents problems. Early coordination prevents costly problems. The best clash to resolve is the one discovered before construction begins.
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BIM & Digital Transformation Monday Tip – Week 16: Classification Systems Matter A BIM model is only as useful as its ability to organize and retrieve information. Classification systems provide a common language for categorizing assets, elements, systems, and information across a project. When used consistently, classification improves collaboration, reporting, data exchange, and asset management. To make classification effective, focus on: • Use a recognized classification system – Adopt a standard such as Uniclass 2015 to ensure consistency across disciplines and project stages. • Classify elements consistently – Apply the correct classification codes to model elements so information can be easily searched, filtered, and reported. • Support data exchange – Standardized classifications improve interoperability between BIM tools, CDEs, and asset management systems. • Improve quantity and cost reporting – Classification structures help organize quantities, specifications, and cost information more effectively. • Enable lifecycle asset management – Consistent classifications support operations and maintenance by making asset information easier to locate and manage. This approach aligns with ISO 19650, which emphasizes structured information, consistency, and effective information management throughout the asset lifecycle. Good classification turns project data into usable information.If information cannot be found, it cannot be effectively managed. Classify it correctly from the start.
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https://kier-my.sharepoint.com/:b:/g/personal/sileshi_tesema_kier_co_uk/IQDfN2oN6Q8CQ6VWp1r5jrNGAf0nGJuwVXXa35N3l_dne_Y
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Check out EthioFaith's document. Open the shared document: https://acrobat.adobe.com/id/urn:aaid:sc:EU:7537392b-0ca7-41da-ac7c-99f99ee527ff Download the Adobe Acrobat Reader app: https://adobeacrobat.app.link/0ConAY8MF3b
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BIM & Digital Transformation Monday Tip – Week 15: Improve Data Quality The value of BIM depends on the quality of the data it contains. Even the most detailed model becomes unreliable if the information is incomplete, inconsistent, or inaccurate. High-quality data supports better decision-making, coordination, reporting, and asset management throughout the project lifecycle. To improve BIM data quality, focus on: • Data completeness – Ensure all required parameters and information fields are populated before sharing or approving models. • Data consistency – Use standardized naming conventions, classifications, and parameter structures across all disciplines. • Regular validation checks – Perform routine audits to identify missing, duplicate, or incorrect information before it impacts project delivery. • Clear ownership of data – Assign responsibility for creating, reviewing, and maintaining information to ensure accountability. • Continuous quality monitoring – Track data quality throughout the project, not just at major submission milestones. Tools such as Autodesk Construction Cloud, Solibri, and Microsoft Power BI can help monitor and validate BIM data quality. This approach aligns with ISO 19650, which emphasizes information quality, validation processes, and reliable data management throughout the asset lifecycle. Reliable decisions start with reliable data. Quality models are important, but quality data is essential.
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BIM & Digital Transformation This week Tip – Week 14: Use BIM Execution Plans (BEP) Effectively A BIM Execution Plan (BEP) is more than a project document—it’s the roadmap for BIM collaboration and delivery. A well-structured BEP helps teams align workflows, standards, responsibilities, and information exchange processes from the beginning of the project. To make a BEP effective, focus on: • Project goals and BIM uses – Clearly define how BIM will be used for coordination, scheduling, quantity take-off, visualization, or asset management. • Roles and responsibilities – Identify who is responsible for modeling, coordination, approvals, and information management throughout the project. • Standards and workflows – Establish naming conventions, file structures, review procedures, and model exchange workflows to ensure consistency. • Software and interoperability – Define the approved software platforms, file formats, and data exchange methods to improve collaboration between teams. • Information delivery process – Set timelines, milestones, and approval stages for model and data submissions. This approach aligns with ISO 19650, which emphasizes structured planning, collaborative workflows, and clear information management procedures. A strong BEP creates clarity before the work begins. A well-defined BIM process leads to better project coordination and delivery.
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ለመላው የእስልምና እምነት ተከታዮች፣ መልካም በዓል ይሁንላችሁ፣ ኢድ ሙባረክ።
ለመላው የእስልምና እምነት ተከታዮች፣ መልካም በዓል ይሁንላችሁ፣ ኢድ ሙባረክ።
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ለመላው የእስልምና እምነት ተከታዮች እንኳን ለ1447ኛው የዒድ አልፈጥር በዓል በሰላም አደረሳችሁ፣ መልካም በዓል።
ለመላው የእስልምና እምነት ተከታዮች እንኳን ለ1447ኛው የዒድ አልፈጥር በዓል በሰላም አደረሳችሁ፣ መልካም በዓል።
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BIM & Digital Transformation Monday Tip – Week 13: Define Information Requirements Early Successful BIM projects begin with clear information requirements. Teams need to understand what information is required, when it is needed, and who is responsible for delivering it. Defining requirements early improves coordination, reduces rework, and ensures project data is useful throughout the asset lifecycle. Focus on the following: • Exchange Information Requirements (EIR) – Clearly define the client’s information needs, deliverables, formats, and BIM expectations before project work begins. • Asset Information Requirements (AIR) – Specify what asset data will be needed for operations and facility management after handover. • Project Information Requirements (PIR) – Identify the information necessary to support project delivery, coordination, and decision-making during design and construction. • Responsibility assignment – Define which team or discipline is responsible for producing, reviewing, and approving each information deliverable. • Information delivery timelines – Establish when models, documents, and data must be shared to support project milestones and approvals. This approach aligns with ISO 19650, which emphasizes structured information requirements and lifecycle-based information management. Clear requirements create clear outcomes. Define information needs early to avoid confusion later.
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BIM & Digital Transformation Monday Tip – Week 12: BIM Is a Continuous Journey BIM and digital transformation don’t happen overnight. They evolve over time through consistent improvement, learning, and adaptation. Success comes from building strong foundations and improving them step by step. To support a continuous BIM journey, focus on: • Start small, scale gradually – Begin with achievable workflows or pilot projects, then expand as confidence and capability grow. • Measure performance – Track KPIs such as model quality, clash resolution time, and data completeness to understand progress. • Learn from projects – Capture lessons learned and apply them to improve future workflows and standards. • Update standards regularly – Keep BIM standards and processes aligned with industry best practices and project needs. • Invest in people and culture – Encourage collaboration, training, and a mindset open to digital change. This approach aligns with ISO 19650, which promotes continuous improvement, structured processes, and lifecycle-based information management. BIM maturity is built over time—not in a single project. Progress step by step. Consistency drives transformation.
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Hello, Please help Hailemikael to finish his paperwork by filling the Google doc.He is Msc student in Addis Ababa University.
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https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSejO-Ue0hIrRa2EZQrf7TxcOSJYgViihj19IQFnWNJfi60i4A/viewform?usp=preview
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We have noticed that some people are in AAiT please be informed that it is the former EiABC
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BIM & Digital Transformation Monday Tip – Week 11: Train by Role, Not Tools Digital transformation succeeds when people understand what they need to do, not just which buttons to click. Training should be aligned with roles and responsibilities, ensuring each team member gains the right level of knowledge to perform effectively. To implement role-based training, focus on: • Define roles clearly – Identify who is responsible for modeling, coordination, review, approval, and data management. • Tailored training content – Provide training specific to each role (e.g., coordinators vs. project managers) instead of generic software sessions. • Focus on workflows – Teach how information flows through the project (CDE, approvals, data exchange), not just tool usage. • Practical use cases – Use real project scenarios to make training relevant and easier to apply. • Continuous learning – Support ongoing training and upskilling as tools, standards, and project needs evolve. This approach aligns with ISO 19650, which emphasizes clear roles, responsibilities, and structured information management processes. When people understand their role, tools become easier to use and adoption improves. Train people for their responsibilities—not just the software.
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BIM TALKS presents a first-of-its-kind pilot demonstration of 5D BIM: 🏗 Eyerusalem Kelemwork Co-founder & BIM Manager, ConTech Consulting P.L.C | Researcher/Lecturer, Debre Berhan University | Executive Committee, EBIMS "5D BIM Implementation: Demonstration Through a Pilot Project in Ethiopia" → A pilot-based demonstration of 5D BIM workflows, highlighting integration of modeling, scheduling, and cost estimation in Ethiopia's AEC context. Then, the floor opens to a panel of practitioners who actually coordinate projects and set industry standards: 📐 Hirut Walelign (PMP, PPSTE) Senior Project Coordinator, PPT Office | Vice President, EBIMS → The coordination lens: how senior project leadership absorbs and scales digital workflows 🏗 Kidase Kefybelu (PMP, PPSTE) Structural Engineer | General Manager, EBIMS → The technical backbone: engineering rigor meeting organizational transformation ⚡️ Sofonias Solomon (PMP) BIM Manager | Advisory Committee, EBIMS → The execution reality: what BIM management actually looks like on Ethiopian projects YOU'LL WALK AWAY WITH: ✅ A live look at 5D BIM workflows built for Ethiopia's AEC reality ✅ How to unify modeling, scheduling, and cost before ground breaks ✅ Unfiltered perspective from four leaders who engineer, coordinate, and manage at the top ✅ Practical insights no online course will give you 📅 Saturday, May 2, 2026 🕑 2:00 PM – 4:00 PM (Doors open 1:30 PM) 📍 AAU School of Built Environment Registration is mandatory - https://forms.gle/84iE3ZWjCSKBwhc66 Seats are limited (70 Spots). The future isn't waiting. #5DBIM #BIM #DigitalConstruction #AEC #Architecture #Engineering #ConstructionManagement #ProjectManagement #BIMManager #BIMCoordination #StructuralEngineering #MEP #ProjectControls #CostEstimation #ConstructionTechnology #DigitalTransformation #VDC #BIMExecution
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BIM & Digital Transformation Monday Tip – Week 10: Think Beyond Handover BIM value doesn’t end at project completion. The real long-term benefit comes when information supports operations, maintenance, and asset management. Plan early so the data created during design and construction is usable after handover. To think beyond handover, focus on: • Asset information requirements (AIR) – Define what data the client needs for operations (e.g., equipment details, maintenance schedules) from the start. • Structured asset data – Ensure model elements carry the right information (serial numbers, warranties, specifications) for future use. • COBie deliverables – Prepare standardized asset data outputs to support facility management systems. • Integration with FM systems – Ensure BIM data can be transferred into CAFM/CMMS platforms for ongoing operations. • Lifecycle mindset – Consider the full asset lifecycle (design → construction → operation), not just project delivery. This approach aligns with ISO 19650, which emphasizes whole lifecycle information management and asset-focused data delivery. When BIM supports operations, it delivers value long after construction ends. Don’t stop at handover, plan for the asset’s entire lifecycle.
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