Service corridor governance uses BIM to control route hierarchy, access zones, no-build areas, future capacity, and maintenance movement. It prevents corridors from becoming uncontrolled service storage.
Why This Matters
Service corridors often carry many systems through narrow space. Without governance, late routes consume access, block replacement paths, and damage future flexibility.
Practical Guidance
Define Route Priority: Establish which systems get priority by size, slope, safety, maintenance, and flexibility.
Protect Access: Mark walkways, panel access, valve access, and replacement zones as protected space.
Reserve Future Capacity: Keep spare zones for future cables, pipes, or tenant services where required.
Control Changes: Any route change in a service corridor should be reviewed against the governance model.
Checklist
- Define service route hierarchy before detailed routing
- Protect access and replacement zones as no-build areas
- Reserve future capacity where required
- Review corridor changes against governance rules
LUA BIM LABS Insight
A service corridor needs rules. BIM makes those rules visible before the corridor fills up.
LUA BIM LABS — Products & Services
Personalized MEP BIM Tutor (Starter Plan)
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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.
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