DESIGN & MANUFACTURING
The future of building product manufacturing and fabrication
Bring your expertise to building projects and inform decisions that define the spaces around us.
DESIGN & MANUFACTURING
Bring your expertise to building projects and inform decisions that define the spaces around us.
Due to changing expectations of building occupants, 77% of architects saw an increased need for customized solutions and closer collaboration with suppliers.
Nearly three-quarters of architects surveyed said that highly collaborative relationships are very important to the success of their projects.
Lack of Building Information Modeling (BIM) proficiency was listed as a supplier deal-breaker by 48% of architects.
Provide BIM content to make it easier for your clients to specify your products into projects. Work inside building models to design in the context of the building. And exchange all this data in one seamless digital ecosystem to help all your stakeholders communicate more efficiently.
Whether you make standard, catalog, or completely custom solutions, ensure your products are perfectly matched to project requirements by automating product configuration or designing right inside the business model.
You need to be able to meet even the tightest project delivery schedule and adapt to changing project requirements. Help improve agility–from the engineering department to the sales team–by digitalizing enterprise systems and optimizing production processes.
Collaborate with clients using centralized data in the BIM ecosystem, reference building data in your designs, and generate BIM content of your product designs.
Manage product data and development processes with tools that adapt to your business. Start simply, scale easily, and realize the promise of connected people, processes, and data.
Capture and re-use engineering knowledge and intent to reduce errors and time spent on tedious, repetitive modeling tasks like product configuration, drawing creation, and more.
Generate a digital representation of your production facilities and equipment by combining BIM and digital factory planning.
Whatever you make, however you want to make it—Autodesk has the advanced manufacturing software you need.
Building projects are changing–and so is your place in them. In this new study, architects share how they see the role of their suppliers evolving.
VECOR
See how Vecor used product design and factory modeling technology to reduce the environmental impact of its ceramic tiles.
Image courtesy of Vecor/3D Chemoprag
VIEWRAIL
See how a leading manufacturer of stair parts and custom staircase systems rapidly adapted its engineering processes to fulfill orders faster.
Image courtesy of Viewrail
ON DEMAND WEBINAR
Do you know the deal breakers in your client relationships? Hear from industry experts from both sides of the table—architecture and manufacturing—to understand the evolving role of suppliers in building projects.
Building product manufacturers make products, equipment, and supplies that go in and around buildings, such as windows, doors, elevators, escalators, HVAC systems, light fixtures, kitchen fixtures, bathroom fixtures, and wood elements. Custom fabricators provide a mechanical design-to-manufacture service for bespoke or custom items, such as entrance canopies and facades, handrails, staircases, and curtain walls.
Building products manufacturers use a variety of software at different stages in the development process, industrial design software, mechanical 3D CAD, product lifecycle management (PLM), computer-aided manufacturing (CAM), and visualization and rendering applications.
The use of building information modeling (BIM) methodologies and software is now widespread within the architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) industries. Manufacturers who strive to partner with their AEC clients must become BIM-fluent so they can consume and create data that is compatible with the applications currently used to design the buildings their products are used.
Digital transformation is about connecting your entire organization with the data and insights needed for everyone to perform their job to the best of their ability. This brings together different disciplines within the company, enables a higher order of collaboration with your clients, and provides a foundation for automation that leads to significant improvements to overall throughput and productivity.
In a recent survey conducted by Harvard Business Review, more than three-quarters of architecture, engineering, and construction respondents stated that there is an increasing attention to the building occupant experience throughout the building design process. Since the manufactured products provided by companies in the building products industry play a significant role, a higher degree of collaboration is required to plan and evaluate that experience prior to construction.
A recent survey of architects, engineers, and contractors conducted by Harvard Business Review identified the following trends:
73% say having a highly collaborative relationship with their building product manufacturers is important to the success of their projects.
77% say there is an increasing need for customized solutions and closer collaboration.
23% say BIM proficiency is among the most important factors when choosing a supplier.
25% say ability to meet project delivery schedules is the most important factors in choosing a building product supplier.