Sunday, 13 September 2009

FREE AUTOCAD SOFTWARE

FREE AUTOCAD, REVIT, CIVIL 3D SOFTWARE & TRAINING WORTH OVER 10000£

The Autodesk Assistance Program offers architecture, engineering, design, and manufacturing professionals a 13-month student license to AutoCAD, Revit Achitecture, Autodesk Inventor Professional, and AutoCAD Civil 3D software for free. Also included is free online training, reduced-cost classroom training, and reduced-cost certification preparation and exams. This offers must be availed before 31st December 2009.

WHICH AUTOCAD SOFTWARE ARE AVAILABLE FOR NO-COST

F Free* Software License: Student licenses of 17 Autodesk® products including AutoCAD® software and other industry focused products supporting Building Information Modeling and Digital Prototyping technology.

F Free Online Training: On-demand training available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. (requires internet access)

Reduced Cost Classroom Training: Many Autodesk Authorized Value Added

RResellers and Autodesk Training Center (ATC®) partners are offering classroom training at their facilities for free or for a significantly reduced fee. (Offerings will vary, please check with your local ATC or Reseller to get details)

Certification: Certification preparation and exams available at discounted rates through Autodesk Authorized Certification Centers

4 EASY STEPS TO GET FREE AUTOCAD SOFTWARE

1. Determine if you meet program eligibility requirements at

http://www.autodesk.com/assistance

2. Register for Program Participation and certify your program eligibility

3. Receive your confirmation email

4. Log in to the secure site with your new credentials

Eligibility Criteria:

Applicants must meet the following eligibility requirements:

Must be currently unemployed

Must have worked in the architecture, engineering, design or manufacturing community

·

Must complete online application required elements, including personal contact

· information

Must specify their date of departure from their former employer, employer name,

· and HR contact information

Must self-certify that they meet eligibility requirements

WHICH SOFTWARE ARE AVAILABLE FOR FREE DOWNLOAD

For AEC Professionals: Increasing the products available under the program to

include a broader representation of the Building Information Modeling (BIM) portfolio,

including: AutoCAD®, Autodesk® Revit® Architecture, AutoCAD® Civil 3D®,

Autodesk® Revit® Structure, Autodesk® Revit® MEP Suite, AutoCAD® Architecture,

Autodesk® Ecotect® Analysis, Autodesk® Navisworks® Manage, AutoCAD® P&ID

and AutoCAD® Map 3D software.

For Manufacturing Professionals: Increasing the products available under the

program to include a broader representation of the Digital Prototyping (DP) portfolio,

including: AutoCAD®, Autodesk® Inventor® Professional, Autodesk® Alias® Surface,

Autodesk® Alias® Design, AutoCAD® Electrical, and AutoCAD® Mechanical

software..

For Geospatial Professionals: The program now includes AutoCAD® Map 3D

software.

For Media & Entertainment Professionals: The program now includes 90 day

licenses of Autodesk® 3ds Max® and Autodesk® Maya® software.

Saturday, 12 September 2009

WHAT IS SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH

Scientific research has three properties that may distinguish it from other forms of research. First, it is methodical.

That is, in advance of doing the project, you can lay out a methodology by which you will conduct your research, and that methodology leads knowledgeable reviewers to be able to assess the likelihood of success at achieving your stated objective. Second, it is repeatable. That is to say that, if reasonably competent persons repeat your methodology reasonably well in disparate locations at different times, they will get essentially the same results.

Third, it is verifiable. You can show that the results you have obtained are the results you claim.

Thursday, 10 September 2009

Construction Cost Estimation in Pre-Design

Construction Cost Estimating at Predesign

CONSTRUCTION COST ESTIMATING
A basic element of the design process is facilities construction cost estimating.
Establishing a reasonable construction budget during the predesign
work will add direction and integrity to the design process. The
predesign will typically consider multiple process alternatives. Each type
of process will have a different construction cost. The owner must take
into account interest rates, administrative/legal costs, design engineering
costs, land use, and local political considerations. Invariably the issue
of design engineering and engineering support during construction will
be carefully reviewed and negotiated in part on the integrity of the predesign
process. Each of the process alternatives will also have unique operation
and maintenance costs dependent on the requirement for labor,
energy, chemical and other consumables.
Since design development is a dynamic process, it is very important
that the estimated cost of the project be periodically checked against the
capital budget. Therefore, a series of cost estimates are prepared and
compared to the previous ones. These estimates should be as detailed as
possible, based upon the increasing level of information available. It is
recommended that written guidelines for each of type of construction cost
be developed. An initial set of guidelines is offered below.
The Association for the Advancement of Cost Engineering, (AACEi)
has established a comprehensive set of standards and guidelines for this
purpose. It is imperative that the entire design team, and all project
stakeholders, be kept fully informed, and be held responsible for their
participation in the establishment of budgets for design, and ultimately

for the final construction cost of every project. A project-centered approach
coupled with an effective, open channel of communication will
prevent unfortunate surprises to escalating or uncontrolled costs. It will
further help ensure a professional engineering environment, directed at
problem solving, rather than one deteriorating into reactionary, or adversarial,
relationships between members of the design team.
More specifically, these guidelines establish the criteria, format, usage,
accuracy, and limitations of the various types of construction cost
estimates. To accomplish this task it is necessary to implement the following
criteria:
 Define the type of cost estimates and a detailed narrative called
the Basis of Estimate to be prepared during the various phases of
a projects development. Within these definitions would be the expected
accuracy of the cost estimate as well as limitations on its
value and use.
 Define the responsibility for the preparation and review of these
cost estimates.
 Define the cost estimating method relative to the construction and
capital improvement costs of the facilities.
 Develop the procedures to prepare and review the cost estimates
on a uniform basis.
Once developed, these standards can be implemented on all design
projects and capital improvement programs. A consistently applied set of
guidelines and growing project database as well as local unit pricing data
can provide a more accurate, less problematic cost estimate.
4.2 CLASSES AND TYPES OF COST ESTIMATES
Construction cost estimates are categorized into five classes: 5, 4, 3, 2,
and 1, in reverse numerical order by level of detail available depending
on their use. Each cost estimate should include a ‘‘Basis of the Estimate’’
narrative as discussed below. As the level of detail required in performing
the cost estimate increases, the labor and experience of the estimating
staff required to complete the material take-off and pricing rises significantly.
The estimating accuracy discussed below, pertinent to each class
of cost estimate, is not meant to represent absolute limits or guarantees,
but instead to establish a most likely range within which the final project
construction cost will fall.

The Consumer Price Index (CPI): The Bureau of Labor Statistics of
the U.S. Department of Labor produces monthly data on changes
in the prices paid by urban consumers for a representative basket
of goods and services. It is applicable, in a general sense, to the
monthly and annual change in the cost of goods and services in
the end user market. These would be price- level changes in aggregate
including construction related goods and services for labor
and incidental materials.
 The Producer Price Index (PPI): This is also prepared by the U.S.
Bureau of Labor Statistics and measures the average change over
time in the selling prices received by domestic producers for their
output to the wholesale market. These are price-level changes in
specific manufactured products, including construction related
goods like cement, steel, and pipe.
 The Engineering News-Record Construction Cost Index (ENR-CCI):
This is applicable in a general sense to the construction costs.
Created in 1931 the ENR-CCI most nearly tracks the price-level
changes in major civil engineering capital construction costs over
time.
 The Handy-Whitman Index of Water Utility Construction Costs:
This has been maintained since 1949 and is applicable to water
and wastewater treatment plants. This index more closely approximates
aggregate price-level changes in more complex treatment
plants and pumping stations.
 The Marshall and Swift National Average Equipment Cost Index:
This is specifically for the tracking of complex equipment pricelevel
changes. It is useful in the indexing of pure equipment costs
over tim

Construction Cost Estimation

Costs Associated with Constructed Facilities

The costs of a constructed facility to the owner include both the initial capital cost and the subsequent operation and maintenance costs. Each of these major cost categories consists of a number of cost components.

The capital cost for a construction project includes the expenses related to the inital establishment of the facility:

  • Land acquisition, including assembly, holding and improvement
  • Planning and feasibility studies
  • Architectural and engineering design
  • Construction, including materials, equipment and labor
  • Field supervision of construction
  • Construction financing
  • Insurance and taxes during construction
  • Owner's general office overhead
  • Equipment and furnishings not included in construction
  • Inspection and testing
The operation and maintenance cost in subsequent years over the project life cycle includes the following expenses:
  • Land rent, if applicable
  • Operating staff
  • Labor and material for maintenance and repairs
  • Periodic renovations
  • Insurance and taxes
  • Financing costs
  • Utilities
  • Owner's other expenses
  • http://pmbook.ce.cmu.edu/05_Cost_Estimation.html

Construction Cost Estimation Free Tutorial


Every person in construction management must be familiar with the estimating process. You have been asked to manage a small project which involves painting only one office room. Contractor has given you the rough estimates but you want to figure out for yourself how much paint will be actually needed.

Class Discussion

1. What types of information will be required to make this determination?

Based on that information, how many gallons will you need and how much will it cost?

Basic Information

One gallon of paint covers 350 square feet (SF). Each gallon of paint costs Rs. 270 . The room is 16´x 14´ with an 8´ ceiling, one door (3´x7´), and three windows (each 3´x4´).

Add Image

Specification

Paint all walls and ceiling with two coats of paint, one color only. Do not paint door, windows, or trim.



Tuesday, 8 September 2009

AUTOCAD BASICS FREE TUTORIAL

The Sketching and Annotation, Pre-Civil, and Pre-Architectural units use AutoCAD or AutoCAD based appplications. To ensure thatyou have the prerequisite basic skills to use these applications a series of introductory exercises are provided. The objectives of the exercises are as follows:

  • Navigate the AutoCAD graphic environment, zooming and panning to view objects, using the command window, the help system, and exploring environment settings and function keys.
  • Configure fundamental drawing settings and options such as scale, grid, snap, object snap, file paths, and display colors.
  • Create basic AutoCAD objects such as lines, polylines, circles, arcs, and polygons using menus, palettes, keyboard commands, mouse controls, coordinates, and object snaps
  • Modify AutoCAD objects using multiple techniques including grip editing and object properties
  • User layers to control object settings.
  • Navigate and view objects in 3D
  • Create reusable internal blocks and world blocks
  • Use externally referenced drawings in the current drawing
  • Draw objects in paper space (layouts) and configure one or more viewports in a layout.
  • Create a properly formatted layout with required map elements such as a title block, north arrow, border, and scale.
  • Configure the page setup and plot layouts to an engineering scale.

Saturday, 29 August 2009

Building Information Modeling Using Revit and Civil 3D

Modeling for building design and civil engineering with Revit and Civil 3D.


Autodesk recently announced that the number of users of its 3D model-based software has passed the one million mark. Although 3D software for mechanical design, such as Autodesk Inventor, has been standard in the manufacturing industry for many years, the one-million-users milestone couldn't have been reached so soon without the growing adoption of 3D in the form of building information modeling (BIM) across the AEC industry.

With this growing adoption, architectural and engineering teams using BIM are seeking partners in related disciplines who can support this way of working. Take civil engineering, for example. The Revit family of products, purpose-built to support BIM for building design, doesn't directly support civil engineering design needs for building sites, subdivisions, roads, utility systems, and similar projects. How can civil engineering businesses best support design projects using a BIM workflow?

AutoCAD Civil 3D is the answer. Through an integrated, dynamic model that links design and documentation, Civil 3D delivers consistent, coordinated, computable information about civil engineering projects very much as Revit does for a building project. This month's "1-2-3 Revit" installment explores the synergies between BIM and civil engineering.

BIM and Civil Engineering Working Together
Model-based design isn't new to civil engineering by any means; consider the prevalence of coordinate geometry (COGO) and digital terrain model (DTM) applications. What is new is the concept of linking the civil engineering model environment (the design) and the drafting environment (the documentation).

Through this dynamic model, Civil 3D automatically coordinates the design and the drawings. When one aspect of the design changes, other related parts of the design -- including labels, annotation, and other documentation items -- automatically update to reflect that change. For example, when the elevation of the surface model changes, the contours and profiles for that surface update automatically, as do the contour labels, reporting, and spot elevations relating to that surface. This capability will be familiar to BIM adopters -- change management is at the heart of BIM.

Let's look at an example of a BIM workflow using Revit and Civil 3D: an office building project that could be potentially derailed by two major changes.

Revit and Civil 3D in a BIM Workflow -- Early Design
In our Revit and Civil 3D example, the architectural and the site designs are brought together early in the process -- enabling both firms to better visualize and coordinate their designs. Design data is exchanged between Revit and Civil 3D by using DWG files.

For example, the architect exports early conceptual building shapes from Revit in DWG format and sends it to the engineer, who xrefs them into the Civil 3D model. The resulting building envelope and preliminary site model is easily communicated back to the architectural firm for schematic design by sending the Civil 3D model (as a DWG file), which can then be imported back into Revit.

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Design data is exchanged between Revit and Civil 3D by using DWG files. Above, a Revit model is exported to an AutoCAD DWG file. Below, a building model is xrefed into a Civil 3D model.

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In our project example, the owner has an aggressive schedule for the new building and wants to fast-track the project, so the engineers create a preliminary design with all the site grading based on the location of the building envelope. The preliminary site design is nearly complete when the first major project change occurs. The owner needs to increase the building size, which affects both the building envelope and preliminary site design.

The architect using Revit revises the building information model, and all the documentation automatically updates. The revised building information is exported to a DWG file and sent to the civil engineer, who simply refreshes the xref to see the revised building and then updates the site model and grading design to accommodate the larger building. Like Revit, Civil 3D automatically coordinates the design and the documentation, and the affected drawings automatically update.

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Civil engineering firms using Civil 3D can work in concert with a building team using Revit to quickly update and reconcile design changes, such as the increased building footprint shown here in this before and after sequence. Note the original building footprint is shown in blue in the top two images, and the revised footprint is shown in orange.

Revit and Civil 3D in a BIM Workflow -- Detailed Design
As the project moves into detailed design and then construction documentation, coordination between the architect and engineer becomes particularly important. The engineers create their construction documents using the architectural backgrounds and vice-versa. When the MEP engineers begin their work and need to tie the building mechanical systems into the preexisting town services (water, sewer, drainage, and electric), the coordination becomes even more critical. The high-fidelity model information from Revit and Civil 3D is easily shared among all these participants through the use of DWGs.

Remember that this project is fast-tracked, so the construction document (CD) set for the site excavation is issued while the rest of the project is still in design. That's when the second major project change occurs. Early site excavation reveals a large amount of contaminated material that must be removed and hauled offsite -- in more than 200 truckloads! But, the owner wants to forge ahead with this particular site, so the engineering firm decides to slightly lower the elevation for the whole site (generating additional excavation material so the owner doesn't have to purchase and haul in new material). Time is crucial at this point, as the contractor is charging the owner for downtime while the site is being reengineered.

The engineering firm uses Civil 3D to quickly rebalance the cut and fill for the site and calculate how much they need to lower the entire site. When the Civil 3D design model is updated, all the related objects and annotation are updated as well. All the contours, the spot elevations, the building's finished floor elevation, , the utility profiles, the pond volumes, and the earthwork volumes -- they are all updated without manual intervention, producing a consistent, coordinated site design and documentation set. In turn, that high-fidelity site information can be communicated back to the architect easily via a DWG file for incorporation into the building information model to vertically coordinate the architectural design on the revised site.

Revit and Civil 3D Together
The core concepts of BIM apply similarly to building design and civil engineering. Through the creation and use of coordinated, internally consistent, computable information, BIM is revolutionizing how technology is used throughout the AEC industry and transforming drawing-based processes to model-based processes. Civil 3D supports this way of working for civil engineering, resulting in faster design, higher quality, better coordination, and ultimately a better performing project.