You are on page 1of 1

Bim is the future It is easy to be grabbed by the optimism of technology in those days.

At the moment I am in Boston, six hours west of Autodesk AEC Technology Summit for two days. The company, which for years have argued that the time has come for new technology-driven inputs in the construction process under the slogan "Build The Model". Here in Boston, they present the news media from around the world. In December, our reporter went Per Hindersson four time zones eastward on a monthlong trip to India. The aim was to study the Indian engineering in bim-terms and to meet with Swedish companies in place with its own operations or partnerships started. For now, it is fast. When mediating trio during Bengt K Johansson's management got Building and BI to sign how practical would go about creating the new construction contract, was one of the most powerful arguments in the text in spring 2009 the Swedish construction company must develop competitiveness in a global economy. This is what much of this issue is about. "BIM is the future," says Daniel Segenstedt at Skanska Teknik in this second issue on the theme of India-Sweden, this time with offshoring as keywords. The point is not that the price squeeze design. It's about getting more information soon. There is profitability, says Segenstedt. "Bim's great potential lies in the construction phase, not in the design stage." Is it about to export the collar jobs to a low-wage countries? The development will deny. U.S. wages here on the East Coast is more than twice the Swedish, which in turn is three, four times the Indian. But it's not the point. The big point is the ability to gather the best talent in a virtual team work around a specific project. No matter where in the world it is.

You might also like