Why the Window for Full-Lifecycle Digital Twins in Australia Is Closing (and What You Should Do About It)

The construction and infrastructure sectors are evolving rapidly. Digital twins—dynamic, data-rich replicas of physical assets—are no longer just a novelty; they are becoming the standard approach for delivering and operating major projects. If your firm hasn’t progressed beyond pilot projects, the risks—both competitive and financial—are significant. Below, I clarify what a full-lifecycle digital twin truly entails, why postponing adoption poses dangers, how Australian policy and projects are influencing expectations, and a practical AEC roadmap to expand from pilot to organisation-wide implementation by 2026.

What does a “Full-Lifecycle Digital Twin” Mean:

A full-lifecycle digital twin is more than a 3D model. It’s a connected digital representation that follows an asset from early design, through construction and handover, into operations and long-term maintenance. Key characteristics:

  • Integrated data across phases — design deliverables, as-built reality capture, system telemetry, maintenance records and asset metadata live in one interoperable environment. gov.au
  • Continuous updates & context — the twin is kept in sync with the physical asset (IoT, inspections, updated models), so it supports decision-making at every lifecycle stage. CSIRO
  • Use-case breadth — from clash detection and risk reduction in construction, to predictive maintenance, energy optimisation and asset valuation in operations. CSIRO Publishing

When the data handover at practical completion is structured, machine-readable and joined to operations systems, you’ve achieved a full-lifecycle outcome — not just a one-off “digital model”.

The Risks of Being Late (and why “wait and see” is Dangerous)

Fallback to pilots or half-measures carries concrete costs:

  • Cost overruns and rework: Not identifying clashes or asset-interface issues early increases on-site rework and schedule delays. Digital twins dramatically reduce these surprises. Build Australia
  • Chaotic handovers: Poorly packaged as-built data forces facilities teams to recreate or re-capture information, driving duplicate costs and delayed operations. gov.au
  • Inferior asset performance & higher lifecycle cost: Firms that can’t link operations telemetry to models miss opportunities for optimisation and predictive maintenance — which increases whole-of-life expense. CSIRO analysis shows digital approaches can materially change cost modelling and decision outcomes. CSIRO Research+1
  • Regulatory and procurement expectations: Governments and owners are beginning to require spatially enabled, interoperable data — meaning late adopters will struggle to win the next wave of projects. gov.au

In short, the window to build capability is closing. Adopting later will be more expensive and riskier than acting now.

ANZLIC Principles: The Australian “Why” and What’s Expected:

Australia’s spatial information governance and guidance set a clear foundation for how digital spatial information should be managed. The ANZLIC guidance and metadata expectations emphasise discoverability, standardized metadata, and interoperable spatial data — all of which underpin a trustworthy, usable digital twin at scale. anzlic.gov.au+1

What does this mean for AEC teams:

  • Standardise metadata at creation (don’t bolt it on at handover). ANZLIC stresses metadata as part of business processes. gov.au
  • Adopt spatial data frameworks so twin content is discoverable and reusable across agencies and lifecycle stages. gov.au
  • Plan for interoperability — use open or well-documented exchange formats and align with national spatial reference and address standards. gov.au

Aligning design and delivery with ANZLIC principles isn’t just compliance — it’s futureproofing tender ability and operational value.

What Major Contractors are Already Doing:

Leading contractors in Australia have moved beyond experimental dashboards to embedding reality capture, integrated models, and digital-first handovers into delivery workflows. Industry reporting highlights Australian sites where construction-phase reality capture, coordinated BIM and digital twin integration are now routine on large builds — reducing rework and improving schedule predictability. Build Australia+1

Takeaway: these are not isolated research pilots. Major players are using these practices to gain schedule, safety and cost advantages — and procurement owners are starting to expect them.

City-Scale Proof: Sydney’s Urban Digital Twin:

Sydney has become one of Australia’s most cited city-scale digital twin examples. Academic and government work on Sydney’s urban twin demonstrates how integrating real-time and historical datasets (transport, emissions, weather, land use and utilities) enables better planning, risk modelling and policy testing across an entire urban area. These projects show scalable benefits beyond a single building — from disaster response and traffic management to emissions planning. arXiv+1

City-scale twins make one point clear: the value of twinning increases with connectedness. If your asset data can plug into broader city or regional twins, the return on investment grows substantially.

The Business Case — CSIRO and Cost-Modelling Evidence:

CSIRO and related research emphasise that digital twins are not just technical toys — they reshape cost modelling, procurement choices and lifecycle investment decisions. CSIRO projects and publications highlight how digital twins enable better scenario testing and reveal savings in planning, risk mitigation and operations when models are used across the asset lifetime. In short, the business case is real when twins are used for operations and maintenance, not only during design. CSIRO Research+1

AEC roadmap: move from pilot → scale in 2026

Below is a practical, industry-specific sequence to go from successful pilots to organisation-wide adoption during 2026.

Q1 — Clarify value & governance

  1. Identify 3 high-value use cases (e.g., clash avoidance in construction, handover automation, predictive maintenance).
  2. Appoint a digital-twin sponsor from senior leadership and form a cross-discipline steering group (PM, BIM/DE, ICT, FM, procurement).
  3. Define metadata and data ownership aligned with ANZLIC/State spatial principles. gov.au+1

Q2 — Build pipelines & standards

  1. Standardise file, metadata, and coordinate systems across projects (adopt ANZLIC metadata profile and a national grid/address framework where relevant). gov.au+1
  2. Implement a repeatable reality capture + QA pipeline (laser scan, photogrammetry, mobile mapping) and link to the model repository. Build Australia

Q3 — Integrate operations & commercial model

  1. Connect the twin to at least one operational system (CMMS, BAS, SCADA) for a pilot asset to prove lifecycle savings. CSIRO Research
  2. Rework contract/handover annexures to require machine-readable asset metadata and as-built exports.

Q4 — Scale & measure

  1. Convert pilot learnings into a modular playbook (templates, metadata checklists, contractual clauses).
  2. Roll out across 2–3 projects with different delivery models (design-bid-build, design-construct, PPP) and measure KPIs (rework %, handover time, maintenance cost per annum).
  3. Publish outcomes internally and in tender responses — demonstrate how you reduce the owner’s whole-of-life cost.

Continuous: invest in staff upskilling (BIM/Digital Engineering, spatial metadata, O&M integration) and build an internal “twin” platform roadmap that emphasises interoperability.

Act Now or Pay Later:

Full-lifecycle digital twins are no longer a theoretical advantage — they’re becoming a procurement and operational expectation in Australia. ANZLIC guidance outlines how spatially enabled, well-documented data should be managed; major contractors are already embedding these practices; city-scale examples from Sydney show the scale benefits; and CSIRO work confirms the financial upside when twins are used across operations.

If your firm is still in pilot mode, pick one business problem (handover, maintenance, or construction rework), align it to ANZLIC metadata principles, and run a focused 2026 programme to prove the ROI. The window is closing — but acting smartly now will make you a leader rather than a follower.

Draftech – Your Project, Our Expertise

Digital Transformation Isn’t Just About Technology—It’s About People and Processes

“Technology has given us amazing tools, but if you look at the productivity of our industry, it hasn’t really improved in decades. The problem isn’t the technology itself – it’s how we work together. Until we change the way we collaborate and make decisions, we’re just layering tools on top of the same old processes” – David Foley, Managing Director, IIMBE

(https://revizto.com/en/revizto-unplugged-recap-sydney-2025-shaping-the-future-together/?utm_medium=social&utm_source=linkedin&utm_campaign=unplugged_apac_2025)

When organisations embark on digital transformation, they often focus on implementing new technologies. However, true digital transformation isn’t just about adopting the latest tools—it’s about rethinking processes and ensuring that people can effectively use and benefit from these changes. Without proper alignment between technology, processes, and people, digital transformation efforts can fail to deliver their expected value.

Why Digital Transformation Requires More Than Just Technology:

  1. Technology Alone Won’t Solve Process Inefficiencies– Automating a broken process only speeds up inefficiencies. Organisations must first optimise workflows before introducing automation.
  2. People Drive Transformation, Not Systems– Employees need the right training and support to fully leverage new technologies. Resistance to change is one of the biggest obstacles in digital transformation.
  3. Processes Must Be Agile and Scalable– Business needs evolve, and rigid processes can prevent organisations from adapting quickly. An agile approach to ITSM and digital workflows ensures long-term success.

To Successfully Navigate the Technology Transition, Companies Should Focus on Several Key Areas:

  1. A clear vision and goals – A clear vision and clear goals are the building blocks of any digital transformation strategy. The company needs to be clear about what it wants to achieve by going digital. Are the goals to improve the experience of customers, streamline internal operations, make things run more smoothly, or reach a wider audience? These goals should be clear, measurable, and in line with the main aim of the organisation.
  2. Focusing on the customer – A strong commitment to a customer-centred approach is at the heart of the digital transformation strategy that works. It’s important to know what your customers want, need, and do. The plan should explain how going digital will improve the experiences of customers, create value, and help build relationships that last.
  1. Making decisions based on data – In the digital age, data is what keeps things going. A digital transformation plan needs to cover all aspects of data management to reach its full potential. This includes getting info, analysing it, and keeping it safe. It should also include following the rules about data protection to make sure that the data is handled responsibly. When organisations use data-driven decision-making, they can make decisions based on real insights instead of guesses.
  1. Changes in Culture – When an organisation goes digital, it often needs to change its attitude. Businesses need to encourage a mindset of coming up with new ideas, being flexible, and always learning. People who work for you should be told to welcome change and see it as a chance to get better and grow. This culture change is necessary for the digital revolution to work.
  1. Integration of Technology – Technology is what makes digital change possible. The plan should explain how digital technologies will be used in every part of the business. This includes the tools, software, and infrastructure that make digital projects possible. By integrating, the company makes sure that everyone works together in the digital world.
  1. Dealing with Change – When an organisation goes digital, it often has to change its methods, workflows, and culture. To make sure employees accept and adjust to these changes, it is important to manage change well. To make the transition go smoothly, this requires clear communication, training, and ongoing help.
  1. KPIs stand for key performance indicators. – Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) are important for organisations to set up and keep track of to see how well their digital transformation strategy is working. These KPIs could include things like higher customer happiness, lower costs, better operational efficiency, more sales, and other results that are in line with the goals that were set. KPIs give us a way to measure how well our attempts to go digital are working.

 

Emphasising People & Process:

At the heart of every successful digital transformation is a commitment to people and process. Technology provides the tools, but it’s the way teams collaborate, adapt, and innovate that drives real progress. At Draftech, we believe that when projects are supported by expertise and empowered by culture, technology becomes more than a tool—it becomes a catalyst for lasting impact.

Draftech – Your Project, Our Expertise

Building Smarter Under Pressure: How Australia’s Cost Escalation, Labour Shortages & Material Challenges Are Driving Technology Adoption

Australia’s construction industry is under immense pressure. Cost escalation, labour shortages, and material volatility are converging to create a perfect storm — one that demands smarter building practices and accelerated technology adoption.

Why Now? Innovation Is Urgent, Not Optional:

Australia’s construction industry is under immense pressure. Cost escalation, labour shortages, and material volatility are converging to create a perfect storm — one that demands smarter building practices and accelerated technology adoption.

Here’s what’s driving the urgency:

  • Cost Escalation: Rising material prices, global supply chain disruptions, and increased transportation costs are inflating project budgets and stretching timelines.
  • Labour Shortages: Skilled labour is in short supply, driving up wages and intensifying competition for workers. This challenge is compounded by housing access issues and interstate migration pressures.
  • Material Challenges: Locally intensive materials like concrete, plasterboard, and bricks continue to rise in cost, making it increasingly difficult for private sector projects to remain viable.

These compounding pressures are forcing firms to rethink how they build — and fast. By reimagining procurement, contracts, and delivery models, builders can improve productivity, remain competitive, and navigate the uncertainty ahead.

Housing productivity has fallen by more than 53% over the past three decades — it now takes twice the effort, resources, and cost to deliver the same level of housing output as 30 years ago.

The most dangerous phrase in construction is: “We’ve always done it this way.” – Revizto White Paper

The time to act is now.

 Where Are Construction Costs Rising Fastest?

Looking ahead, cost escalation is expected to remain elevated through 2027:

  • Brisbane: Forecasted to reach 7.00% in 2025, easing to 6.50% by 2027 due to Olympic-related infrastructure tapering off.
  • Sydney & Melbourne: Sitting around 4.50%, driven by slower project pipelines.
  • Perth: Tracking at 5.75% in 2025, easing to 4.75% by 2027.

Across all markets, escalation remains well above pre-2021 levels, fuelled by persistent material, labour, and regulatory pressures.

How Technology Reduces Risk and Builds Resilience:

Smart technologies are helping firms de-risk projects, improve delivery certainty, and unlock new efficiencies. Here’s how:

  • Digital Twins: Simulate real-world conditions, enabling predictive maintenance and performance forecasting.
  • Building Information Modelling (BIM): Enhances design coordination, clash detection, and stakeholder collaboration.
  • Off-site Manufacturing & Modular Construction: Reduces on-site labour needs, accelerates timelines, and improves quality control.
  • IoT & Smart Sensors: Provide real-time data on material usage, equipment health, and site safety — enabling faster, data-driven decisions.

What to Prioritise in the Next 6–12 Months:

For AEC firms and clients looking to stay competitive, here’s where to focus:

  1. Audit your digital maturity: Identify gaps in workflows, data sharing, and model coordination.
  2. Prioritise BIM integration: Especially for government and infrastructure projects where digital delivery is becoming mandatory.
  3. Explore prefab partnerships: Collaborate with modular builders to reduce on-site dependencies.
  4. Upskill your teams: Invest in training for BIM, digital twin platforms, and data literacy.
  5. Pilot IoT on high-risk projects: Start small with sensor-based monitoring for safety or materials tracking.

 

Budget-Friendly Technology Adoption Roadmap:

Phase Timeline Focus Area Tools/Approach Budget Tip
1. Assess Month 1–2 Digital readiness Internal audit, stakeholder interviews Use free BIM maturity tools (e.g., NATSPEC Quickstart)
2. Prioritise Month 3–4 High-impact areas Target BIM coordination, prefab feasibility Leverage existing software licenses
3. Pilot Month 5–8 Small-scale implementation IoT sensors, modular trial, digital twin demo Seek vendor trials or government grants
4. Scale Month 9–12 Broader rollout Integrate platforms, train teams Bundle training with software procurement

Further Reading:

WT Construction Cost Pressures to Persist Through 2025 https://www.brokernews.com.au/news/breaking-news/construction-cost-pressures-to-persist-through-2025-wt-287534.aspx

Australia’s Productivity Crisis – API Magazine https://www.apimagazine.com.au/news/article/australia-s-productivity-crisis-deepens-as-construction-costs-defy-global-trends

Build Australia – Cost Escalation Outlook https://www.buildaustralia.com.au/news_article/construction-cost-escalation-in-australia

Builders face daunting mission to boost housing supply despite ‘green shoots’ – ABC News

Cost Escalation in Australia’s Building and Construction Industry

Draftech – Your Project, Our Expertise

Are Digital Twins, Progressive Assurance, and AI Still “Hot” in AEC — and What’s Happening Now?

Short answer: yes — but they’ve moved from novelty to practical, uneven adoption. Digital twins, progressive assurance (a structured, staged approach to quality and handover) and AI are all major conversation topics in AEC today — increasingly driven by real projects, vendor products and new contracting approaches — yet uptake varies by sector, project size and organizational maturity. Below, we explain where each stands in 2024–25, what’s actually happening on projects, and the practical barriers firms still face.

Digital Twins: From Concept to Critical Infrastructure

Digital twins are no longer just marketing copy; governments and large owners are harnessing them to improve decision-making, operations and whole-life value. Recent industry analysis highlights their ability to accelerate and improve complex infrastructure and facility decisions, and to deliver measurable ROI when tied directly to operational needs (asset management, maintenance, energy, or transport optimisation). McKinsey & Company+1

What’s happening now:

  • Owners of large or critical assets (transit, data centres, hospitals, campuses) are commissioning digital twins that connect BIM, IoT sensors, and operational data — aimed at predictive maintenance, energy optimisation and scenario simulation. Digital Construction Hub
  • Software vendors (Autodesk Tandem, Bentley iTwin, Azure Digital Twins and others) are shipping more dashboarding, data-validation and ops-focused features to make twins useful beyond handover.
  • Case studies and academic reviews show digital twins work best when built for clear use cases (not “build everything” experiments). Technical success is usually tied to governance, data quality and stakeholder alignment. ScienceDirect+1

Bottom line: digital twins are hot where owners can justify operational savings or risk reduction, and they’re maturing from R&D projects to business cases — but broad, small-project adoption remains limited.

Progressive Assurance: Proactive Risk Management, Gaining Traction as Part of Delivery

“Progressive assurance” — the idea of staged, ongoing assurance checkpoints across design and delivery to reduce nonconformance and rework — is being adopted in quality management and increasingly referenced alongside progressive design-build delivery approaches. Industry guidance and project teams are formalising assurance points to improve handover readiness and reduce surprises at practical completion. Shirley Parsons+1

What’s happening now:

  • Contracting bodies and insurers are publishing documents and guidance that support progressive (staged) design–build and clearer assurance milestones so owners and contractors share risk and visibility earlier. aiacontracts.com+1
  • On projects using digital workflows, progressive assurance is often implemented via dashboards, data completeness checks and automated QA rules that gate progress to the next stages. That makes assurance practical rather than purely audit-based.

Bottom line: progressive assurance is not a flashy technology but a pragmatic shift in delivery mindset — it complements digital twins and BIM by turning data checks into contractual checkpoints.

AI: The Engine Behind Smarter Workflows, Cautious Rollout

AI is everywhere in AEC conversations — from design automation, clash detection and quantity take-offs to safety monitoring and predictive maintenance — but adoption is mixed. Recent industry surveys show many firms experimenting with or running pilots; a significant share report little to no implementation yet, reflecting uncertainty around integration, skills and clear ROI. RICS+1

What’s happening now:

  • Practical AI use cases on-site: video analytics for PPE and hazard detection, automated progress monitoring from cameras and photogrammetry, and NLP to extract data from specs and RFIs. Vendors are productizing these into usable features (safety cameras, automated reporting).
  • Design-side AI (generative design, code compliance checking, cost estimation) is being trialled by larger firms and software vendors; many smaller firms still rely on human expertise supported by point tools. BuiltWorlds
  • Challenges: data silos, lack of common standards, limited in-house AI skills, legal/regulatory concerns about automated decisions and liability, plus demand for explainability and auditing of AI outputs. RICS

Bottom line: AI is hot in headlines and pilot decks; its real, scaled impact depends on firms solving integration, governance and workforce-readiness problems.

Cross-cutting Realities and Challenges

  1. Data & interoperability depend on clean, connected data. Twins, assurance gates and AI all fail or underdeliver with poor data governance. Taylor & Francis Online
  2. Value-led use cases — the most successful implementations tie tech to a clear owner problem (lower OPEX, avoid rework, prevent downtime). McKinsey-level ROI arguments are influencing public-sector pilots. McKinsey & Company
  3. People & contracts — new contracting forms (progressive design-build, staged handover) and new roles (data managers, digital delivery leads) are emerging to make tech work in practice. aiacontracts.com
  4. Uneven adoption — large owners, infrastructure and specialist sectors lead; small builders and many SME consultants lag.

Practical Advice for Firms and Project Teams

  • Start with a single, measurable use case (e.g., reduce O&M cost on HVAC via a twin; reduce site incidents using AI cameras). Build instrumentation and data pipes for that use case first. McKinsey & Company
  • Bake progressive assurance into contractual milestones: define data completeness gates, QA rules and handover outputs up front. Shirley Parsons+1
  • Focus on data quality, responsibilities and a simple integration layer (APIs, common formats) before buying “advanced” AI. Taylor & Francis Online
  • Invest in a small multidisciplinary team (project manager + data engineer + domain SME) to run pilots, measure outcomes and scale what works.

Innovation is moving fast. The question isn’t whether these technologies are still relevant — it’s whether you’re ready to harness them. At Draftech, we believe your project deserves more than just support. It deserves a partner who understands the landscape and can guide you through it.

Draftech — Your Project, Our Expertise.

Is Poor Communication Costing Your AEC Projects?

In Australia’s construction sector, poor communication isn’t just a frustration — it’s a profit killer. Studies show that:

  • 🛠️ 30% of construction work involves rework, often caused by design errors and miscommunication.
  • 💬 48% of that rework is due to poor communication among project stakeholders.
  • 📉 Rework can slash annual profits by up to 28%, costing an average of 0.39% of a project’s total contract value.

These numbers tell a clear story — the industry’s biggest risk isn’t always technical. It’s human. When data, design intent, and field execution fall out of sync, the result is lost time, wasted material, and damaged trust between teams.

Where Communication Breaks Down

Even on well-planned projects, communication failures often happen when:

  • Multiple teams work from different file versions or outdated drawings.
  • Model coordination happens in isolation without clear accountability.
  • Comments, markups, and issues are tracked across emails, PDFs, and spreadsheets — not a central platform.
  • Field teams can’t easily access the latest data from the site.

These gaps make collaboration harder than it needs to be. That’s where integrated digital workflows come in.

How Revizto and BIM Digital Engineering Close the Gap

Revizto has become a game-changer in streamlining communication across the entire AECO (Architecture, Engineering, Construction, and Operations) chain. By bringing all disciplines — architectural, structural, and MEP — into one collaborative 3D environment, it eliminates the traditional silos that cause confusion and rework.

Here’s how:

  • Centralised Issue Tracking: All comments, markups, and RFIs live in one place, linked directly to model elements.
  • Real-Time Coordination: Teams can visualise design intent and changes instantly — from the office or the field.
  • Accountability & Transparency: Every change and issue is logged, creating a clear audit trail.
  • Cross-Platform Access: Whether on desktop, tablet, or mobile, everyone is always looking at the latest data.

When paired with BIM Digital Engineering, Revizto transforms complex design coordination into a transparent, collaborative workflow. Issues can be identified earlier, design intent stays intact, and decisions are made faster with reliable information at hand.

Collaboration Workflows that Drive Project Success

At Draftech, we believe technology is only half the story — the real value comes from how teams use it. Our collaborative BIM workflows ensure every stakeholder — from design consultants to contractors — works from a single source of truth.

Our approach:

  • Model Coordination & Clash Detection using Revizto and Navisworks to identify issues early.
  • 4D and 5D Integration to align design, time, and cost data.
  • Constructability Reviews that connect digital models to real-world installation.
  • Communication Protocols designed to ensure accountability and traceability at every stage.

How Draftech Can Help

Draftech helps project teams establish a connected BIM environment where communication is structured, data is centralised, and coordination is proactive — not reactive.

We provide:

  • Revizto implementation and training to embed collaboration into your workflow.
  • BIM coordination and digital engineering services that reduce rework and improve decision-making.
  • Custom workflows that fit your project’s specific needs — from design through construction and handover.

By connecting technology, data, and people, we help you reduce rework, improve clarity, and keep your projects on track.

Poor communication is one of the most expensive problems in construction — but it’s also one of the easiest to fix with the right tools and approach.

With Revizto, BIM Digital Engineering, and Draftech’s collaborative workflows, you can turn fragmented communication into coordinated progress — saving time, money, and frustration across every project phase.

Draftech – Your Project, Our Expertise

Autodesk AU 2025: The Next Frontier in Building Design & Neural CAD

At Autodesk University 2025, the spotlight rested not only on AI and cloud technologies but on how those forces are reshaping the AEC (architecture, engineering, construction) world. Two of the most compelling announcements were:

  1. Forma Building Design — a new, cloud-based design tool targeting LoD 200 detail as a bridge between concept and BIM
  2. Neural CAD — a generative AI foundation model approach embedded in both Forma (for buildings) and Fusion (for geometry)

Below is a closer look at both innovations, their implications, and what they may mean for practice in Australia and the APAC region.

Introducing Forma Building Design: Elevating to LoD 200

What is Forma Building Design?

  • Forma Building Design is a new browser-based tool within the Autodesk Forma ecosystem, unveiled at AU 2025.
  • It is positioned as the next step up from early-stage planning (now encapsulated by Forma Site Design, the rebranded version of the original Forma tool) into a more detailed building design environment.
  • The target detail level is LoD 200, with prospects of pushing into LoD 300 in future iterations.
  • It combines parametric, AI (generative) and manual modelling tools, along with real-time analyses (daylight, carbon, solar, etc.).
  • Users — including non-BIM specialists — are meant to engage earlier in design and explore alternative solutions without needing deep parametric skillsets.

Why LoD 200?

  • In BIM parlance, LoD 200 generally indicates that elements have approximate geometry (size, shape, location) but not full detail (no full connection, joinery, or fabrication detail).
  • By targeting LoD 200, Autodesk positions this tool as a stepping stone: enough fidelity to make performance decisions (e.g. daylight, solar, volumetric form) while not overburdening early phases with construction-level detail.
  • It’s a practical compromise — more meaningful than massing/concept alone, but lighter than full detailed BIM in Revit or later.
  • Autodesk and commentators expect that, over time, Forma Building Design might encroach further into LoD 300 territory as the neural CAD and analysis capabilities mature.

Key Features & Workflow Highlights

  1. Design with intent
    Designers can manipulate facades, layouts, and spatial logic (e.g. corridor types) while seeing feedback in real time (daylight, carbon, solar exposure)
  2. Layout exploration / alternative generation
    The tool’s “Building Layout Explorer” can quickly generate and regenerate interior layout alternatives (unit mix, circulation, daylight trade-offs), allowing side-by-side comparison.
  3. Seamless transitions to BIM tools
    Models authored in Forma Building Design will be able to flow into Revit (and later into structural/MEP workflows) via “connected client” setups.
    Revit is the first Autodesk desktop tool to become a Forma Connected Client, enabling users to tap into Forma’s analyses directly within Revit.
    Analysis results (solar, wind, etc.) from Forma tools will be accessible in Revit, eliminating repeated exports/imports.
  4. Inclusivity & accessibility
    Autodesk emphasizes that the interface and capabilities are designed for a broad audience — even those without deep parametric or BIM experience — lowering barriers to engaging with 3D building design.
  5. Cloud-native, multi-tool integration
    Forma Building Design is a core part of the Forma industry cloud, which now spans planning, design, construction, and operations (by integrating Autodesk Construction Cloud).
    It taps into Forma Data Management (formerly Autodesk Docs) as the central hub for AECO project data.

Potential Challenges & Considerations for Australia / APAC

  • Adoption & talent readiness: Many firms in Australia are still consolidating BIM practices; integrating a new tool (even at LoD 200) requires change management and training.
  • Connectivity & latency: As a browser/cloud-first tool, performance depends on reliable internet connectivity; remote or regional sites may have latency or bandwidth constraints.
  • Transitioning to Revit / downstream tools: The success of Forma Building Design will heavily depend on how cleanly geometry, data, and analyses flow into Revit, structural/MEP tools, and documentation workflows.
  • Cost & licensing: Autodesk has hinted at generous cloud usage limits for early adopters, but users may be wary of usage caps or rising costs once in production.
  • Local compliance & standards: In Australia and APAC, local codes, climate zones, and regulatory standards may require customisation or adjustments in analysis modules (e.g. solar studies, energy modelling).

Introducing Neural CAD: A Generative Foundation Model for Forma & Fusion

What is Neural CAD?

  • Neural CAD refers to generative AI foundation models that reason natively about CAD geometry, systems, and workflows, not merely via prompts or post-processing.
  • Autodesk is developing two types of neural CAD:
    • Neural CAD for buildings (embedded in Forma)
    • Neural CAD for geometry (embedded in Fusion)
  • These models are trained to understand both geometric form and systemic relationships (e.g. adjacency, building systems, spatial logic) — enabling them to “reason” about what makes sense in a design context.

Neural CAD in Forma (Buildings)

  • In the context of Forma Building Design, neural CAD helps bridge the gap between early conceptual sketches and more detailed building layouts — enabling smoother transitions between phases.
  • Using sketch, text, or other inputs, the system can propose building layouts, circulation schemes, façade massing, unit arrangements, or corridor types, automatically regenerating alternatives based on constraints like daylight or carbon goals.
  • Because the neural CAD engine is embedded, these generative proposals remain natively editable — not locked black boxes.
  • One ambition is that neural CAD might automate a large portion (Autodesk hints at 80–90%) of repetitive or assistant-level geometry tasks while letting designers focus on higher-level decision-making.

Neural CAD in Fusion (Geometry)

  • For Fusion, the neural CAD model deals with pure geometry: designers will be able to generate boundary representation (BREP) geometry from prompts (text, sketch, image), and then refine or manipulate it further.
  • This approach is distinct from classical parametric engines — it’s more flexible, intuitive, and adaptive to design intent expressed in natural language or sketch.
  • Autodesk also plans to allow users to fine-tune or customise neural CAD models based on their organisation’s data and workflows, making them adaptive over time.

Why Neural CAD Matters

  • Seamless transitions across abstraction levels: Designers often lose momentum when moving from sketch/concept to modelled form. Neural CAD is intended to smooth that jump.
  • Multi-modal input: Neural CAD supports prompts via language, sketching, or image references — making the interface more flexible and human-centric.
  • Editable generative output: Unlike many AI tools that output static geometry, neural CAD’s outputs remain part of the modelling domain — editable, parametric, and connected.
  • Contextual reasoning: Because the model is trained on architectural and industrial systems and geometry, it can propose solutions that make sense not only geometrically but in building logic (e.g. adjacency, circulation, structural logic).
  • Productivity gains: Autodesk claims that neural CAD could automate 80–90% of what designers currently do as manual or assistant-level geometry manipulation.

Challenges & Risks Ahead

  • Model robustness & trust: Generative models must reliably propose valid geometry and design logic. Designers will need confidence that outputs aren’t arbitrary or error-prone.
  • Domain specificity: Architectural and construction rules differ globally (codes, climate, regulations). Training a neural CAD that is useful in Australia may require local data tuning or constraints.
  • Interpretability & control: Designers may want explicit control over constraints (e.g. structural spans, building regulations). Ensuring that designers can override or guide the neural model is critical.
  • Computational demands: Real-time generation and editing with neural models may require significant compute (likely cloud GPU) — raising questions of performance, latency, and cost.
  • Change management: Integrating generative AI into existing design workflows (especially in firms used to Revit-centric or parametric workflows) will require cultural and procedural adjustments.

What This Means for Firms in Australia & APAC

  • Early exploration & experimentation: Now is a good time for forward-looking firms to get on the Forma Building Design beta waitlist (once available), so they can test workflows, integrations, and local applicability.
  • Pilot local projects: Try small or schematic-phase projects in the new tool to test how it handles local climate (e.g. solar, daylight) and local regulatory constraints.
  • Build internal AI & data capacity: Firms should begin thinking about how their internal project datasets (past BIMs, standards, constraints) could feed or customize neural CAD models for local use.
  • Advocate for local standards: As AI-driven tools become more integrated, local AEC standards bodies should engage to ensure models respect Australian building codes, fire safety, accessibility, etc.
  • Train for hybrid workflows: Until the new tools mature, expect hybrid workflows (some work done in Forma Building Design, some in Revit or specialist tools). Teams will need cross-tool fluency.
  • Monitor licensing & usage costs: Keep an eye on cloud usage, quotas, and how Autodesk structures pricing for AI/compute usage in the Forma cloud.

For further information, be sure to check out the following:

Autodesk Blog – https://adsknews.autodesk.com/en/news/upcoming-3d-generative-ai-foundation-models/

AEC Magazine – https://aecmag.com/ai/autodesk-unleashes-neural-cad/

Engineering.com – https://www.engineering.com/autodesk-introduces-neural-cad-at-au-2025/

Draftech – Your Project, Our Expertise

Advanced BIM and Multidimensional Modelling — Moving Beyond 3D

For years, 3D BIM (Building Information Modelling) has been the foundation of digital construction. It gave the industry the ability to visualise structures, identify clashes, and coordinate design with better accuracy. But as technology evolves and projects become more complex, the AEC industry is looking beyond 3D.

Welcome to the era of multidimensional modelling — where BIM extends into 4D, 5D, 6D, and beyond, linking data, time, cost, and performance throughout a building’s entire lifecycle.

From 3D to 4D, 5D, and 6D – What Do the Extra Dimensions Mean?

Each new BIM dimension adds a layer of intelligence to the model, turning it from a visual tool into a dynamic information system that drives smarter decision-making.

4D BIM – Time

4D BIM connects the 3D model with the construction schedule. This creates a time-based simulation that allows teams to visualise how a project will be built, step by step.
By integrating the program with the model:

  • Sequencing clashes can be identified early.
  • Stakeholders can see construction progress before it happens.
  • Site logistics and safety can be better planned.

At Draftech, 4D modelling is often the first “aha” moment for clients — seeing how BIM drives real-world efficiency on-site.

5D BIM – Cost

5D adds cost data to the model. Materials, quantities, and assemblies are linked to pricing structures, providing live cost feedback as design changes occur.
This means project teams can:

  • Instantly understand the cost impact of design choices.
  • Create more accurate estimates and tender submissions.
  • Control budgets more effectively throughout delivery.

In short, 5D BIM brings transparency to one of the biggest challenges in construction — cost control.

6D BIM – Sustainability and Lifecycle Data

6D expands BIM into the realm of sustainability, operations, and lifecycle management.
This model layer includes energy performance, material lifecycle data, and maintenance requirements, enabling asset owners to plan for the long term.

6D BIM is the foundation for Digital Twins — living, data-rich models that mirror the real building in real time.

Digital Twins – The Next Step in Lifecycle Modelling

A Digital Twin is a continuously updated digital replica of a physical asset, used to monitor, simulate, and optimise performance.

By integrating IoT data, sensors, and asset management systems, a digital twin allows building operators to:

  • Track real-time energy use and equipment performance.
  • Predict maintenance needs before issues occur.
  • Extend the asset’s lifecycle through data-driven insights.

For owners and facility managers, digital twins bridge the gap between design, construction, and operations, creating a continuous digital thread across the entire asset lifecycle.

The Power of Integration

The true potential of multidimensional BIM lies in integration.
When 4D (time), 5D (cost), and 6D (operation and sustainability) are connected within one intelligent model, project teams can:

  • Make better decisions earlier.
  • Minimise risk and rework.
  • Delivering assets that perform better, cost less, and last longer.

At Draftech, our focus is on helping clients move from static 3D models to data-rich, multidimensional environments — where every stakeholder benefits from transparency, collaboration, and insight.

Where to Next?

As BIM continues to evolve, the focus is shifting from design coordination to total lifecycle intelligence.
The question is no longer if you should integrate multidimensional BIM — it’s how soon you can start.

Because in today’s construction landscape, those who leverage 4D, 5D, 6D, and digital twins aren’t just building projects — they’re building the future.

Draftech – Your Project, Our Expertise

In the Trenches: Real Australian Case Studies in BIM, AI & Collaboration Tech

The Australian construction industry is increasingly leaning on digital tools—BIM, AI, collaboration platforms—to deliver better projects, faster, and with fewer surprises. But the path hasn’t always been smooth. Below are several project stories from across Australia that illustrate what went right, what went wrong, and what others can learn.

  1. Perth Children’s Hospital – BIM & Whole-Lifecycle Efficiency

What was done:

  • For the Perth Children’s Hospital (PCH), BIM was mandated for design and construction, including deliverables suitable for facilities management. natspec.org+1
  • Multiple BIM tools and governance processes were used: frequent team meetings, co-location of stakeholders, and coordination of models from different disciplines. natspec.org

Outcomes / Cost & Time Savings:

  • The state of Western Australia recognised that BIM offered opportunities to drive efficiencies and cost savings over the full capital project lifecycle.
  • The case study identified 26 specific benefits from using BIM in PCH. These included improved design coordination, fewer clashes, better coordination between trades, better constructability reviews, more efficient FM handover.

Challenges / What Was Hard:

  • Ensuring all stakeholders adopted consistent BIM standards. Different firms/disciplines sometimes had varying levels of BIM maturity.
  • Managing the governance of the BIM models: who owns which part, who updates, who checks.
  • Integrating BIM data into facilities management workflows (handover, FM use) required more planning and discipline.

Lessons Learned:

  • Mandating BIM helps—but only if the mandate is accompanied by clear requirements (what is delivered, what formats, what level of detail).
  • Early coordination (before construction) among stakeholders is essential. Clashes and errors are far cheaper to resolve in design.
  • Strong governance, communication, and project management of BIM processes are as important as the technology.
  1. Sydney Metro Projects – BIM + Collaboration under Constraints

What was done:

  • On Sydney Metro projects, advanced use of BIM was tested, particularly in coordination and decision-making among multiple parties under constrained circumstances. mce-aus.com
  • Digital models, clash detection, co-ordination meetings, and shared data environments (or collaborative platforms) were used to ensure alignment across design, engineering, construction teams. mce-aus.com

Outcomes / Savings:

  • The projects benefited from fewer rework cycles and fewer surprises on site. Improved decision-making earlier reduced delays. (Exact dollar amounts are not public in all cases, but stakeholders reported improved efficiency and fewer delays.) mce-aus.com

Challenges / What Was Hard:

  • Physical constraints and resource constraints (space, space in the urban environment, site logistics) meant that even with good digital planning, execution could still be difficult.
  • Ensuring consistency of data across multiple design teams/subcontractors: when one party’s model is behind or not compliant, clashes or misalignments can slip through.
  • Cultural / process resistance: Some teams preferred traditional drawings or ways of working, which slowed things down.

Lessons Learned:

  • BIM + collaboration tools only pay off if all parties buy in and maintain their part of the model. Gaps in participation erode benefits.
  • Use digital mockups/clash detection early to identify coordination issues; don’t leave integration until late.
  • Regular coordination meetings and consistent, enforceable standards (file formats, naming, model quality) are essential.
  1. Lessons from Broader Failures & Technology Resistance

While many projects show success, there are also examples where things didn’t go well—either partly failing or delivering less than hoped, especially around AI, adoption, and collaboration.

What has been observed:

  • Technology adoption (especially AI/automation) remains relatively low in Australian construction, often due to concerns about cost, unclear ROI, data quality, and lack of skills. Build Australia+1
  • Poor collaboration and communication breakdowns are still among the most common causes of project delays and cost overruns. It’s not always the tech that fails—it’s the process, roles, responsibilities, and alignment that do. Accura Consulting+1
  • Some high-profile infrastructure or construction projects suffer from schedule and budget blowouts due to under-estimating risks (site conditions, stakeholder coordination, regulatory / permitting delays) and not having good digital/AI-driven simulations or predictive tools in place. jcu.edu.au+1

Key Lessons from Failures:

  • Don’t treat technology as a plug-and-play cure. Without well-defined processes, clear governance, training, and ownership, even excellent tools under-deliver.
  • Plan for the people side—change management, training, incentives, roles. Resistance will constrain ROI.
  • Data quality matters: If inputs (models, data sets, schedules, cost estimates) are poor, the outputs / predictive models/clash detection / AI models will suffer. Garbage in, garbage out.
  • Predictive tools (AI, simulations) are only useful if you have enough historical, sensor or site data to feed them; for many projects, this is a gap.
  1. Case Study: Using BIM for Time & Cost Reduction (Recent Research Insights)

A recent open-access multi-case study (2025) looked at several projects globally (including some Australian cases) and quantified what BIM implementation achieved:

  • On average, a 20% reduction in project timelines and a 15% reduction in costs when BIM was properly used, particularly via reducing design errors, RFIs (Requests for Information), and unbudgeted changes. SpringerLink
  • Also reported: design errors reduced by ~30%, RFIs by ~25%. These kinds of improvements cascade into less rework, more certainty in scheduling, and fewer surprises. SpringerLink

 

 

  1. How AI & Smart Building Technologies Are Being (or Not Yet Being) Realized

Some projects & firms in Australia are experimenting with AI / smart building tools; here are what’s working and what the sticking points are.

What’s working:

  • AI is being used for predictive maintenance, equipment monitoring, scheduling optimization, and resource allocation. Helps avoid downtime. Steadfast Solutions+1
  • Smart building features (sensor networks, IoT), combining with building models to monitor energy, usage, etc. These bring operational efficiencies and improved sustainability outcomes. PlanRadar
  • Use of cloud-based collaborative platforms for sharing drawings & models in near real time to reduce miscommunication or the use of outdated documents. Particularly helpful for larger infrastructure or hospital projects.

What’s challenging:

  • Many firms report that AI or smart building tech projects stall due to a lack of in-house skills, especially understanding AI models, interpreting outputs, and integrating with existing digital workflows.
  • Data ownership/privacy/security concerns. Collecting sensor data, model data, etc. becomes sensitive in hospital/government / regulated environments.
  • Cost of implementing sensors / IoT / smart systems, and uncertainty about pay-back period.
  • Resistance from subcontractors or suppliers who may be less digital, slower to adapt; sometimes, they are the weak link.
  1. Recommendations / Practical Tips for Firms Starting Out
  • Begin with a pilot project using BIM + collaboration tools / AI, ideally on something of moderate size. Use that as a proof point.
  • Define clear deliverables: model standards, formats, level of fidelity, what gets delivered to FM, and who owns what.
  • Invest in change management: training, accountability, clarity about workflows. Don’t assume everyone will adapt immediately.
  • Ensure governance of digital tools: version control, model checking, standardized naming, consistent toolsets (or defined integration).
  • Data is fundamental: accurate survey/site data, as-built, sensor data if using smart building tech. Poor input = lower benefit.
  • Monitor metrics: cost overrun, schedule variance, number of RFIs, number of clashes, rework hours. Track “before vs after” so you can show ROI.

Australia is seeing clear success stories in using BIM, collaboration tools, and emerging AI / smart building tech. But the projects that have delivered big savings and improved outcomes tend to share these traits:

  • Strong leadership/mandate
  • Clear standards and governance
  • Early coordination and stakeholder alignment
  • Focus on data quality
  • Willingness to invest in people (skills/training)
  • Keeping the scope manageable and avoiding trying to do everything at once

For firms looking to get more from their projects, the message is: the tools are ready but using them well (not just having them) makes the difference.

Draftech – Your Project, Our Expertise

BIM at Scale: Model Management Across the Project Lifecycle

In an era where construction projects are becoming more complex, digitally driven, and performance-focused, BIM at scale—and robust model management—is no longer a “nice to have.” It’s a strategic necessity. When properly executed, it ensures that data flows smoothly, collaboration is genuine, and project outcomes are more predictable across every stage from design to operations.

In the blog below, we’ll explore:

  • What BIM at scale and model management really mean
  • Who should lead and implement it
  • The benefits for every stakeholder
  • Your next steps

What Is BIM at Scale?

“BIM at scale” refers to applying BIM processes, standards, and tools across large, multi-disciplinary projects and embedding model management across the entire project lifecycle (not just in the design phase). It means the BIM environment becomes a living, evolving information system rather than a sequence of isolated 3D models.

Key elements include:

  • Standardisation and Governance of data, naming, classification, version control, and exchange protocols
  • Multiple Interoperable Models (architecture, structure, MEP, services, asset data) co-existing and coordinating
  • Continuity across phases — from schematic design to detailed construction to facility management
  • A Common Data Environment (CDE) or managed information environment, where all stakeholders access, publish, and review shared models

A growing number of industry voices emphasise that extending model management beyond design yields major value. For example, Autodesk describes how “construction model management software is expanding BIM’s value across the entire project lifecycle—from early planning to construction and even into operations.” (Source: Autodesk)

Who Should Lead / Implement Model Management?

To scale BIM successfully, roles and accountability must be clearly defined. Some key roles:

                          Role                                                      Responsibility
BIM Manager / Digital Engineering Lead           Set standards, workflows, enforce compliance, and coordinate across disciplines.
Project Manager / Delivery Lead Align BIM efforts with project objectives, schedule, and budget.
Consultants & Subcontractors Deliver their models/data in compliance with standards; coordinate with others.
Owner / Client / FM Stakeholder Define information requirements, verify deliverables, and ensure long-term value.

 

In particular, the BIM Manager (or equivalent) is the central custodian of the digital process. This person ensures that everyone “uses the same language” (standards, protocols, file exchanges) and is empowered to enforce consistency.

Australian BIM practice is aligning around these principles via the adoption of the ISO 19650 standard series under the AS ISO 19650 banner, which provides a framework for information management across the entire lifecycle.  (Source: bim.natspec.org+2PM Docs+2)

How Can BIM at Scale Benefit Every Party?

Here’s how scaled model management creates real, measurable value for each stakeholder:

Clients / Owners / Operators

  • A trusted digital twin at handover, structured to support operations, maintenance, and future modifications
  • More effective asset lifecycle management and lower operating costs
  • Reduced risk of data loss or information gaps between handover and operation

Design Teams

  • Models built with clarity, interoperability, and coordination, reducing late clashes and rework
  • Better collaboration between disciplines, with streamlined coordination and validation
  • Greater confidence that design intent translates into construction

Contractors & Subcontractors

  • Leaner construction planning and sequencing, with coordinated models driving prefabrication
  • Fewer on-site issues, fewer clashes, less waste, faster installs
  • Enhanced visibility of upstream and downstream dependencies

Facility & Asset Managers

  • Structured, queryable BIM data for maintenance, asset tracking, performance analytics
  • Easier integration with CMMS or FM systems (e.g. leveraging standards like COBie)
  • A digital record that evolves and supports long-term decision making

From the academic side, research suggests BIM integration across lifecycle phases significantly enhances project efficiency, stakeholder coordination, and risk mitigation. A study on BIM + project management integration concluded that continuous BIM use across phases helps improve project management efficiency. (Source: ScienceDirect)

Another study of infrastructure projects found that in design phases, BIM reduced design errors and saved costs, and during construction, it led to reduced rework and shortened timelines. (Source: MDPI)

Because ISO 19650 is designed to standardise information management across the full lifecycle, it is widely adopted to support such benefits.

What Should Your Next Move Be?

Implementing BIM at scale is a change, not just a technology upgrade. Here’s a tactical roadmap:

  1. Define Information Requirements
    As a client or lead stakeholder, define what information you will need at each stage—design, construction, operations. Use this to drive your BEP (BIM Execution Plan) and project contracts.
  2. Adopt or Align to ISO 19650 / Standards
    Use the ISO 19650 framework (or AS ISO 19650 in Australia) as the backbone of your model governance, versioning, information exchange, and standards. (Source: brisbim.com+3Interscale+3PM Docs+3)
  3. Establish a Common Data Environment (CDE)
    Select a platform (cloud or hybrid) where all project information is stored, authored, reviewed, and published in structured workflows. This is foundational to scaling BIM.(Source: https://www.draftech.com.au/common-data-environment-cde-explained-what-it-is-how-it-works-and-who-should-be-managing-it/ )
  4. Appoint a BIM / Digital Lead with Authority
    Nominate someone (or a small team) to oversee compliance, enforce standards, adjudicate coordination, and educate team members. (Source: https://www.draftech.com.au/5-key-takeaways-for-bim-project-management-in-2025/ )
  5. Pilot & Scale
    Start with a mid-sized project to test workflows, iterate, and refine. Use lessons learned before scaling to larger and more complex jobs.
  6. Continuous Review & Feedback
    Use KPIs, audits, clash metrics, and feedback loops to refine model management practices. Treat your model environment as evolving—not static.

BIM at scale isn’t about creating more models—it’s about creating meaningful information systems that genuinely support delivery, operations, and future adaptability. When model management is managed well, it becomes an enabler rather than just a technical task.

At Draftech Pty Ltd, we partner with clients and project teams to help you implement scalable BIM strategies, backed by best practices and standards. If you’re ready to move BIM from experiment to enterprise-grade delivery, the time is now.

Draftech – Your Project, Our Expertise

Forward-Thinking Subcontractors Transforming MEP Construction Processes

Forward-thinking subcontractors are proving that embracing digital tools is not about replacing skilled workers; it’s about amplifying human expertise and unlocking new levels of efficiency.

The challenges are familiar to anyone in the industry: tighter schedules, more complex building systems, and an ongoing labor shortage. Traditional methods for coordination, communication, and project delivery are not keeping up with the demands of current construction projects in Australia.

The Shift in MEP Processes

Traditionally, MEP systems have been one of the biggest pain points on a project. Complex layouts, overlapping disciplines, and on-site changes often lead to clashes, delays, and higher costs. But today’s subcontractors are rewriting this narrative. By adopting digital workflows and Building Information Modelling (BIM), they are streamlining coordination from the earliest design stages to final installation.

Rather than replacing skilled workers, the right technology amplifies human expertise. Field professionals, engineers, and project managers now have tools that allow them to detect issues earlier, plan installations with greater accuracy, and spend less time resolving problems on-site.

Why Collaboration Matters More Than Ever

The key to transformation lies in collaboration. By uniting teams in one shared 2D/3D space across the entire building lifecycle, we drive maximum collaboration and results. This shared environment eliminates silos, ensures every stakeholder is working from the same up-to-date model, and allows decisions to be made faster and with greater confidence.

When subcontractors embrace this approach, projects benefit from:

  • Fewer clashes and rework – thanks to early detection of coordination issues.
  • Faster installation times – with prefabrication strategies planned directly from accurate models.
  • Smarter cost control – reducing waste, errors, and duplication of work.
  • Empowered teams – where skilled tradespeople can focus on quality delivery rather than troubleshooting.

A Future-Ready Mindset

The path to success is clear. The tools and results are within reach. The future belongs to those ready to embrace it. Subcontractors who leverage digital workflows are positioning themselves as indispensable partners, not just contractors. They’re delivering value beyond installation; they’re shaping how projects are designed, coordinated, and brought to life.

At Draftech, we work alongside subcontractors to integrate these technologies into everyday workflows. From BIM coordination to digital twins, we help teams visualize, plan, and execute with confidence. Our focus is on ensuring that skilled professionals have the tools they need to deliver projects more efficiently, faster, and with fewer headaches.

The future of construction is collaborative, data-driven, and innovative.

The question is simple: are you ready to embrace it?

For further information on the MEP Evolution Shift and Technology advancements, we highly recommend you download and read Revizto’s new Whitepaper – https://revizto.com/en/the-mep-evolution/

Draftech – Your Project, Our Expertise

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