Very informative. I am so very glad i came across this video as it helped with a piece of Uni coursework. Made me laugh too because my face was like Jeff bridges.
There are links to the list of all ISO 19650 standards documents in this article (under the heading of "Links to ISO 19650 Standards"): www.plannerly.com/what-is-iso-19650 👍
You can try BS 8541-1:2012 and also the article linked below shares some great approaches. The main project goal is that everyone agrees and follows the same convention. Importantly you will also want to standardise property naming conventions. ISO 23386:2020 and ISO 23387:2020 are worth reading if you haven't already! www.iso.org/standard/75401.html www.iso.org/standard/75403.html www.revit.com.au/understanding-the-british-standard-object-naming-convention-and-other-alternatives/ shop.bsigroup.com/en/ProductDetail/?pid=000000000030240255 Thank you for your feedback!
Hi! How does Plannery encapsulate the Level of information needed out from Milestones/Purpose and put it inside EIR as we all know Level of information needed cannot be specified without a purpose connected to it. Does Plannerly force the Appointing and Lead appointing party to make those pieces of information recorded in the system?
Hi there, 👋 Great question! Yes, Plannerly allows the Purpose to be captured on each Milestone header along with the required deadlines for the Milestone. Once completed (not forced) these can then be reported in the Plan EIR and the Scope for exported contract agreements following Level of Information Need principles 👍
Hello Plannerly team, could you please explain which phases of a construction project life cycle (Riba PoW) ISO 19650 parts 1, 2, 3, and 5 can be applied to?
Great question! Yes Plannerly can be used to plan work for most of the RIBA Stages: Stage 0: Strategic Definition Stage 1: Preparation and Briefing Stage 2: Concept Design Stage 3: Spatial Coordination Stage 4: Technical Design Stage 5: Manufacturing and Construction Stage 6: Handover Stage 7: Use Mostly the Plan module is used for Stages 0 and 1 Then including the Scope module for what needs to be done, when and by whom for Stages 2 through 6.
@@plannerlyAEC Thank you for your reply, much appreciated! My understanding is the following: 19650 parts 1 and 5 should be applied to all of RIBA stages 19650 part 2 can only be applied to the Delivery stage (RIBA stage 5: Manufacturing and Construction) 19650 parts 2 and 3 together should be applied to Delivery and Operation stages Is this correct or am I missing something? I'm a student and my assignment score depends on this info. Thank you :)
@@olivecherryblossoms8110 Yes this can be confusing: the ISO 19650-2 standard is applied to “information management during the delivery of built assets” (Excerpt: ISO. “ISO 19650-1:2018.”) - however, the word “delivery” here does NOT refer to a RIBA Stage or Stages. Delivery here is referring to the act of communicating and fulfilling information requirements during what the ISO 19650 standards refer to as procurement, planning and production processes.
Unfortunately not - the standards are available on the ISO site here: www.iso.org/standard/68078.html - We also have simple video explanations and ISO 19650 templates available here to help: www.plannerly.com/iso-19650-webinar
Yes, you are correct Praveen! AIR does stand for Asset Information Requirements 👍 Also, many teams that are not in BIM already refer to these requirements in lists called "registers" There are so many terms for BIM and non-BIM teams to agree on 😃
@@plannerlyAEC thank you for your response , In your recent videos it is correct. I thought you where refering to some other stuff . Thank you for your time.
Nice of you to share some much information
Thank you for your comment! We appreciate your kind words and we're glad that you find the videos helpful! 😍
Enlightened knowledge 👏🏽
Thank you for your feedback!!
Very informative. I am so very glad i came across this video as it helped with a piece of Uni coursework. Made me laugh too because my face was like Jeff bridges.
Haha! 😁 Great that this could help you! 👍
Do you have
ISO 19650-3:2020 pdf? as it conveyed new definition of LOD /LOI
There are links to the list of all ISO 19650 standards documents in this article (under the heading of "Links to ISO 19650 Standards"): www.plannerly.com/what-is-iso-19650 👍
Excellent video! Thanks... Is there ISO guidance on naming of Revit Familes?
You can try BS 8541-1:2012 and also the article linked below shares some great approaches. The main project goal is that everyone agrees and follows the same convention. Importantly you will also want to standardise property naming conventions. ISO 23386:2020 and ISO 23387:2020 are worth reading if you haven't already!
www.iso.org/standard/75401.html
www.iso.org/standard/75403.html
www.revit.com.au/understanding-the-british-standard-object-naming-convention-and-other-alternatives/
shop.bsigroup.com/en/ProductDetail/?pid=000000000030240255
Thank you for your feedback!
@@plannerlyAEC amazing thank you
Hi! How does Plannery encapsulate the Level of information needed out from Milestones/Purpose and put it inside EIR as we all know Level of information needed cannot be specified without a purpose connected to it. Does Plannerly force the Appointing and Lead appointing party to make those pieces of information recorded in the system?
Hi there, 👋 Great question! Yes, Plannerly allows the Purpose to be captured on each Milestone header along with the required deadlines for the Milestone. Once completed (not forced) these can then be reported in the Plan EIR and the Scope for exported contract agreements following Level of Information Need principles 👍
❣ thank you
We're so grateful for your feedback and glad to hear you enjoyed the video about ISO 19650!
Thank you.
Hello Plannerly team, could you please explain which phases of a construction project life cycle (Riba PoW) ISO 19650 parts 1, 2, 3, and 5 can be applied to?
Great question!
Yes Plannerly can be used to plan work for most of the RIBA Stages:
Stage 0: Strategic Definition
Stage 1: Preparation and Briefing
Stage 2: Concept Design
Stage 3: Spatial Coordination
Stage 4: Technical Design
Stage 5: Manufacturing and Construction
Stage 6: Handover
Stage 7: Use
Mostly the Plan module is used for Stages 0 and 1
Then including the Scope module for what needs to be done, when and by whom for Stages 2 through 6.
@@plannerlyAEC Thank you for your reply, much appreciated! My understanding is the following:
19650 parts 1 and 5 should be applied to all of RIBA stages
19650 part 2 can only be applied to the Delivery stage (RIBA stage 5: Manufacturing and Construction)
19650 parts 2 and 3 together should be applied to Delivery and Operation stages
Is this correct or am I missing something? I'm a student and my assignment score depends on this info. Thank you :)
@@olivecherryblossoms8110 Yes this can be confusing: the ISO 19650-2 standard is applied to “information management during the delivery of built assets” (Excerpt: ISO. “ISO 19650-1:2018.”) - however, the word “delivery” here does NOT refer to a RIBA Stage or Stages. Delivery here is referring to the act of communicating and fulfilling information requirements during what the ISO 19650 standards refer to as procurement, planning and production processes.
@@plannerlyAEC Thank you
@@olivecherryblossoms8110 The Plannerly team is here to help - the best of luck with your studies!! 🎓
is there a free copy of 1SO 19650
Unfortunately not - the standards are available on the ISO site here: www.iso.org/standard/68078.html - We also have simple video explanations and ISO 19650 templates available here to help: www.plannerly.com/iso-19650-webinar
AIR (ASSET INFORMATION REQUIREMENT) ASSET INFORMATION REGISTER. What are you trying to tell here
Yes, you are correct Praveen! AIR does stand for Asset Information Requirements 👍
Also, many teams that are not in BIM already refer to these requirements in lists called "registers"
There are so many terms for BIM and non-BIM teams to agree on 😃
@@plannerlyAEC thank you for your response , In your recent videos it is correct. I thought you where refering to some other stuff .
Thank you for your time.