Harnessing metadata: Powering up BIM, document management, and digital twins

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metadata

Metadata is often overlooked, but every organisation involved in the built environment is producing it every day. Dan Rossiter FCIAT, vice-president technical at the Chartered Institute of Architectural Technologists, looks at how to harness it to support BIM, information management and digital twins

As the built environment undergoes its digital transformation, there are several concepts that underpin this transformation. Whilst BIM and information management (via the UK BIM Framework) and interoperability (via the GIIG ) have been explored in detail, metadata has remained a relatively unexplored topic.

Metadata, put simply, is data about data. When considering metadata, many built environment professionals may think of ISO 19650-1 (information management using BIM concepts and principles), which references metadata as a concept needed to support the use of a common data environment.

Seeing the term used here, many may consider metadata to be a specialist subject. However, unbeknownst to most, all built environment professionals create and use it daily.

The use of metadata in construction

For many, their most recent use of metadata will be when they last sent an email. This is because emails use a header populated with metadata (e.g., sender, receiver, timestamp) to enable their delivery.

In addition, all of the technical documents produced as part of a project or to undergo maintenance work are rife with metadata. Put simply, anything found within a title block or a document’s header or footer has metadata. For example, a drawing (data) will have a title (data about that drawing) and a date of issue (data about that drawing).

Thankfully, support is available to those who wish to make the most of their metadata.

For technical document metadata, there is ISO 7200 (Data fields in title blocks and document headers). This standard specifies the mandatory and optional data fields for title blocks and document headers. In doing so, it provides a consistent name for each field, as well as its recommended character length.

In addition, the standard provides some example title blocks which conform to the provisions of the standard and work well with ISO 5457 (Sizes and layout of drawing sheets).

Example mandatory fields include Legal Owner; Identification Number; Date of issue; and Title. Example optional fields include Revision index, Document status, and Language code.

As such, ISO 7200 provides a useful set of fields for an organisation, such as an architectural design practice, to create metadata-enriched technical documents.

Using metadata will improve an organisation’s discovery, use, and management

Regardless of an organisation’s digital maturity, using consistent metadata on documents will improve their discovery, use and management.

For more mature organisations, there is EN 82045-2 (Metadata elements and information reference model). While the EN 82045 series focuses on document management more generally, Part 2 focuses on metadata in a manner which makes it machine-readable through its application of an EXPRESS-based information reference model.

In doing so, EN 82045-2 has taken metadata from ISO 7200 (and other standards) and has identified for each element:

  • English label (with synonyms).
  • Predefined values (if any).
  • Express model.

For example, Identification Number from ISO 7200 has the identifier “DocumentID”.

This data about metadata allows different organisations and software to use the same data fields to manage their respective documents. As a result, should two organisations and their enabling software adopt EN 82045-2, documents could be shared without a loss of data, improving the speed, quality and efficiency of information exchange between organisations.

Regardless of how digitally mature an organisation is, all of its employees will be using metadata on a daily basis.

As such, tangible benefits can be achieved from harnessing the power of this metadata to support document management, as well as more advanced applications such as within BIM and information management, database-centric approaches, as well as within digital twins.

Such benefits include making documents and other information containers easier to find, move (within an organisation) and exchange (outside an organisation), as well as easier to maintain and manage. In doing so, an organisation can transform its metadata from malign to marvellous.

 

Dan Rossiter FCIAT

Vice-president, technical

Chartered Institute of Architectural Technologists

Tel: +44 (0)20 7278 2206

www.architecturaltechnology.com

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