Cutover planning with BIM coordinates the transition from temporary systems to permanent systems. It shows isolation points, test points, affected users, fallback routes, commissioning steps, and acceptance criteria.
Why This Matters
Cutovers are high-risk moments. A missing valve, untested control sequence, or unclear rollback plan can interrupt building operation and delay handover.
Practical Guidance
Define Cutover Scope: Identify exactly which systems, zones, and users are affected.
Map Isolation and Test Points: Show valves, breakers, dampers, controllers, sensors, and monitoring points.
Prepare Fallback: Plan how the team returns to temporary service if permanent startup fails.
Record Acceptance: Keep test results, operator approval, and final status linked to the model.
Checklist
- Define systems, zones, and users affected by cutover
- Map isolation, control, and test points
- Prepare fallback and rollback procedures
- Record final acceptance evidence in handover records
LUA BIM LABS Insight
Cutover BIM is about confidence under time pressure. The model should help the team know what to touch, what to test, and how to recover.
LUA BIM LABS — Products & Services
Personalized MEP BIM Tutor (Starter Plan)
One practical MEP BIM lesson every day via Telegram. Written for beginners and early-stage BIM learners who want a steady learning habit.
Starter Plan: USD 39/month.
BIM Command Center for Revit (Add-in)
A Revit Add-in with 30+ automation features for MEP BIM — clash filtering, tag batch, space validation, COBie export, and more. Compatible with Revit 2019–2027.
댓글 없음:
댓글 쓰기