Integration of building product models with fire simulation software

There is considerable interest within the construction industry to develop models that are able describe the whole life-cycle of a building in an electronic form. Such models would allow for the sharing of building information across the wide range of industry disciplines and lead to efficiencies in...

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Main Author: Spearpoint, Michael John
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Fire Engineering 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6050
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-60502015-03-30T15:29:18ZIntegration of building product models with fire simulation softwareSpearpoint, Michael JohnThere is considerable interest within the construction industry to develop models that are able describe the whole life-cycle of a building in an electronic form. Such models would allow for the sharing of building information across the wide range of industry disciplines and lead to efficiencies in the design and construction of buildings. This thesis examines the technologies available and specifically within the context of fire engineering. Database methods are used to create a repository of fire growth information which can be accessed through web pages or client applications. The IFC Model has emerged as an internationally agreed building model and this thesis investigates its applicability to fire engineering. A suite of software applications have been developed that interpret IFC documents in a form that can be imported into fire simulation models. The thesis discusses the limitations of the current IFC model for use by fire engineers, the challenges in developing IFC interpretation software that can be successfully integrated with the range and complexity of fire simulation software and suggests where future work should be directed to overcome these concerns.University of Canterbury. Fire Engineering2011-12-14T22:43:46Z2011-12-14T22:43:46Z2005Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/6050enNZCUCopyright Michael John Spearpointhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
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language en
sources NDLTD
description There is considerable interest within the construction industry to develop models that are able describe the whole life-cycle of a building in an electronic form. Such models would allow for the sharing of building information across the wide range of industry disciplines and lead to efficiencies in the design and construction of buildings. This thesis examines the technologies available and specifically within the context of fire engineering. Database methods are used to create a repository of fire growth information which can be accessed through web pages or client applications. The IFC Model has emerged as an internationally agreed building model and this thesis investigates its applicability to fire engineering. A suite of software applications have been developed that interpret IFC documents in a form that can be imported into fire simulation models. The thesis discusses the limitations of the current IFC model for use by fire engineers, the challenges in developing IFC interpretation software that can be successfully integrated with the range and complexity of fire simulation software and suggests where future work should be directed to overcome these concerns.
author Spearpoint, Michael John
spellingShingle Spearpoint, Michael John
Integration of building product models with fire simulation software
author_facet Spearpoint, Michael John
author_sort Spearpoint, Michael John
title Integration of building product models with fire simulation software
title_short Integration of building product models with fire simulation software
title_full Integration of building product models with fire simulation software
title_fullStr Integration of building product models with fire simulation software
title_full_unstemmed Integration of building product models with fire simulation software
title_sort integration of building product models with fire simulation software
publisher University of Canterbury. Fire Engineering
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6050
work_keys_str_mv AT spearpointmichaeljohn integrationofbuildingproductmodelswithfiresimulationsoftware
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