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Help me win the ArchiCad vs AutoCad office debate

Anonymous
Not applicable
I joined a development corporation that until I arrived had no architecture department. I showed my skills and background and thanks to my knowledge of ArchiCad and the Chairman's intense pleasure in seeing things so quickly in 3D, got the job. 2 months later they bring on another architect, one who has done a few projects for this company in the past. He does not computer draft well, but the little he can do is in AutoCad. He's been framing a debate of one vs. the other since he arrived and while I openly offer to translate all the files I work on into his archaic and simplistic program, its like I'm talking to a brick wall. The debate is about to hit a major head and despite my ability to create much faster drawings and without additional time or expense place everything into 3D and have presentation images ready at the drop of a hat, he's playing the "industry standard" card. I point out that the DWG file format is the standard, not the program, but the company execs don't know the difference. I need more fodder for my argument. At this point I'm ready to walk away and pursue another route as this issue highlights more than just a drafting issue. And with a project as large as we are taking on, I can't imagine starting off on the wrong foot and always being 5 steps behind. Somehow the logical argument isn't having the effect I'd prefer. Any suggestions?
20 REPLIES 20
TomWaltz
Participant
Jarvis wrote:
I am assuming "BIM" means something like "Building Image Modeling", is that correct?

Also, I don't know what was meant by "and we got shortlisted a minute ago, probably cuz of the bim thing.... (more ac selling for free)"
BIM is Building Information Modeling, which refers to a program like Archicad or Revit.

"Shortlisting" is part of a process where some body or organization is picking from a large group of architects that they will use and has narrowed it down to a small, select group. Sometimes this happens initially, and only a small group is invited to submit designs/proposals.
Tom Waltz
Anonymous
Not applicable
Wow, that article at http://www.aia.org/tap_a_0903bim was absolutely perfect. It discounts egregious claims about separating 2D and 3D tasks and points out the "old" and inefficient approach, while also highlighting ArchiCad specifically for being ahead of the curve and leading the industry. And its sponsored by the AIA. Many thanks. Any other similar websites or forums I should search?
Anonymous
Not applicable
It seems to be a typical case of the fear of becoming redundant when the role of cross checking documents is minimized, what you need to do to win him over is to make him feel comfortable with the new process, he has to be assured that his experience and knowledge in architecture and construction will remain highly needed in a BIM world. after all AC is only as good as the information you feed into it.

maybe we need a new term here BIMopheobia! any psychiatrists out there willing to study ways of overcoming it?
Anonymous
Not applicable
I have a quad g5 and 30" HD and find that the rendering is actually slower than my laptop PC. And have you encountered where the mouse tracks slower in ArchiCad than in other programs?
TomWaltz wrote:
Jarvis wrote:
I am assuming "BIM" means something like "Building Image Modeling", is that correct?

Also, I don't know what was meant by "and we got shortlisted a minute ago, probably cuz of the bim thing.... (more ac selling for free)"
BIM is Building Information Modeling, which refers to a program like Archicad or Revit.

"Shortlisting" is part of a process where some body or organization is picking from a large group of architects that they will use and has narrowed it down to a small, select group. Sometimes this happens initially, and only a small group is invited to submit designs/proposals.
TomWaltz
Participant
Jarvis wrote:
I have a quad g5 and 30" HD and find that the rendering is actually slower than my laptop PC. And have you encountered where the mouse tracks slower in ArchiCad than in other programs?
Not at all. I find that my renderings absolutely fly.
Tom Waltz
Anonymous
Not applicable
Jarvis wrote:
I have a quad g5 and 30" HD and find that the rendering is actually slower than my laptop PC. And have you encountered where the mouse tracks slower in ArchiCad than in other programs?
Where did you get your RAM? I have seen some horrors with no-name RAM. (This often applies to dealer installed RAM too, there is no telling where they got it from.) It is best to have Apple install it or buy from a top of the line maker such as Crucial.
Anonymous
Not applicable
Jarvis wrote:
Wow, that article at http://www.aia.org/tap_a_0903bim was absolutely perfect. It discounts egregious claims about separating 2D and 3D tasks and points out the "old" and inefficient approach, while also highlighting ArchiCad specifically for being ahead of the curve and leading the industry. And its sponsored by the AIA. Many thanks. Any other similar websites or forums I should search?
Jarvis,

I'm in a structural engineering firm and I agree that you should highlight the 3d versus 2d issue. And as far as "industry standard", we use Autodesk Revit Structure and are currently trading models with a local architect that does wonderful work with Archicad.

Industry standard for the future is going to be something like IFC's. I don't know if it will settle on that specifically but right now it seems like the big one. As long as programs are capable of exporting and importing IFC files ..... there shouldn't be too much trouble with exchanging files (there are still issues, but they're workable)....

Stick to your guns unless it's gonna cost you a job you can't afford to lose!

Rick
Djordje
Ace
Paper is also an "industry standard", yet rarely anybody does it by hand any more ... and an AutoCAD file is barely more than an electronic drawing. It is widespread because it is the lowest common denominator that mostyl anyone can understand and use up to a point.

It is the fear of the unknown and the unwillingnes - or the inability - to learn, sometimes even understand. As a concept, VB runs circles around CAD any time.

Another take on the comparison is return on investment - it has been proven that the productivity in VB/BIM environments is 40-60% higher than in the traditional drafting environments. There are articles on this topic on the Graphisoft web site, search a bit.
Djordje



ArchiCAD since 4.55 ... 1995
HP Omen
Scott Davis
Contributor
Autodesk is now recommending transfer between Arch Desktop and Revit using IFC. Arch Desktop items keep their 'intelligence' through IFC when brought into Revit, something that even the "almighty" DWG cannot do.
Scott Davis
Autodesk, Inc.

On March 5, 2007 I joined Autodesk, Inc. as a Technical Specialist. Respectfully, I will no longer be actively participating in the Archicad-Talk fourms. Thank you for always allowing me to be a part of your community.
stefan
Expert
Scott wrote:
Autodesk is now recommending transfer between Arch Desktop and Revit using IFC. Arch Desktop items keep their 'intelligence' through IFC when brought into Revit, something that even the "almighty" DWG cannot do.
I was told at the local Autodesk User Conference sessions that ADT could exchange intelligent objects with Revit Structure and I assumed it used DWG files. Any chance you know something about it?
The full building model of ADT is kept inside a "mighty" DWG file, so Autodesk should have ways to translate that info over to Revit.

But I do hope that even Autodesk will refocus their attention to IFC and provide a clean and smooth transfer between ADT, Revit and (as a consequence) ArchiCAD. At the moment, the ADT IFC plugin is a non-free add-on which is as much as saying: "you don't need it, and if you do, check with someone else".
e.g. IFC plugin for ADT = http://www.inopso.com
--- stefan boeykens --- bim-expert-architect-engineer-musician ---
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Archicad-user since 1998
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