2026년 7월 4일 토요일

BIM for Rooftop Drone Inspection Planning: Flight Paths, Assets, and Safety

Rooftop drone inspection planning uses BIM to identify assets, safe flight paths, inspection targets, obstructions, restricted zones, and photo naming rules before a drone survey begins.

Why This Matters

Drone inspections generate many images. Without BIM-linked planning, photos can be hard to locate, repeat, and compare over time.

Practical Guidance

Define Targets: Identify roof drains, membranes, plant, screens, gutters, facade edges, and access points.

Plan Flight Zones: Check obstructions, antennas, nearby buildings, safety restrictions, and public areas.

Link Photos: Name and store images by asset, roof zone, direction, and date.

Compare Over Time: Use repeatable viewpoints for condition monitoring.

Checklist

  • Define roof assets and inspection targets
  • Plan safe flight zones and restrictions
  • Link photos to BIM zones or assets
  • Use repeatable views for future comparison

LUA BIM LABS Insight

Drone inspection becomes more useful when every image has a model location. BIM turns photos into comparable evidence.


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.

View feature overview →

댓글 없음:

댓글 쓰기

How to Review Meeting Minutes in Daily BIM Career Training

How to Review Meeting Minutes in Daily BIM Career Training Today's LUA BIM LABS lesson focuses on practical meeting minutes decisions ...