Digital Construction

The structural golden thread: its role in sustainability

Image courtesy of Tekla
So, you’ve built your building and have the constructible 3D model… but what happens next? Here, Duncan Reed explores how maintaining a digital, structural golden thread can be hugely valuable as the industry moves into a more sustainable age.

The golden thread – the term coined by Dame Judith Hackitt during her review of building regulations and fire safety – can be used as a tool to manage buildings as holistic systems and allow people to safely and effectively design, construct and operate their buildings. It is the duty of those responsible for a building to put into place and maintain this golden thread of data and information.

The engineering and detailing phases of a project result in a constructible model containing a wealth of information, both graphical and non-graphical. But what happens to this data once a project has been handed over on site?

For many years, the construction industry has had a poor reputation for collecting, sharing and maintaining data. Moving forward, it is important for project stakeholders to look beyond a building’s initial construction and consider its lifecycle and operational use too.

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