This section examines the critical role of geometric representation in enabling effective information exchange through the Industry Foundation Classes (IFC) data model. It delves into the geometric modeling process and how IFC comprehensively supports various geometric representations to cater to the diverse needs of different building information modeling (BIM) uses and disciplines across the architecture, engineering, and construction domains. Geometric representation is paramount for conveying design intent, enabling spatial analysis, facilitating prefabrication workflows, and supporting physical simulations such as structural analysis, thermal performance evaluation, and fire propagation modeling. The IFC schema provides an extensive set of geometric resources and classes systematically organized into layers, thereby accommodating different geometric modeling approaches, including solid modeling, boundary representation, sweeping operations, and extrusions. The IfcRepresentationResource classes establish the linkage between geometric representations and product objects while specifying the representation context and types. The fundamental geometric entities, such as points, curves, and surfaces, which form the building blocks for generative solid modeling or surface modeling, are defined within the IfcGeometryResource. The IfcGeometricModelResource introduces classes for instantiating solid models through techniques like extrusions, sweeps, Boolean operations, boundary representations, and other advanced methods. Illustrative examples demonstrate how common BIM objects, including walls, slabs, openings, reinforcement, and intricate architectural forms, can be geometrically represented using the relevant IFC classes. The section emphasizes that the quality of geometric support hinges on robust implementations by software vendors for exporting and importing IFC geometry, leveraging the appropriate representation methods. The depth of IFC's geometric capabilities, as elucidated in this section, underscores its potential to meet the diverse requirements across the construction industry, enabling seamless information exchange and model reuse.
Linking Semantic and Geometric Representation in IFC
Paolo Borin
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2023-01-01
Abstract
This section examines the critical role of geometric representation in enabling effective information exchange through the Industry Foundation Classes (IFC) data model. It delves into the geometric modeling process and how IFC comprehensively supports various geometric representations to cater to the diverse needs of different building information modeling (BIM) uses and disciplines across the architecture, engineering, and construction domains. Geometric representation is paramount for conveying design intent, enabling spatial analysis, facilitating prefabrication workflows, and supporting physical simulations such as structural analysis, thermal performance evaluation, and fire propagation modeling. The IFC schema provides an extensive set of geometric resources and classes systematically organized into layers, thereby accommodating different geometric modeling approaches, including solid modeling, boundary representation, sweeping operations, and extrusions. The IfcRepresentationResource classes establish the linkage between geometric representations and product objects while specifying the representation context and types. The fundamental geometric entities, such as points, curves, and surfaces, which form the building blocks for generative solid modeling or surface modeling, are defined within the IfcGeometryResource. The IfcGeometricModelResource introduces classes for instantiating solid models through techniques like extrusions, sweeps, Boolean operations, boundary representations, and other advanced methods. Illustrative examples demonstrate how common BIM objects, including walls, slabs, openings, reinforcement, and intricate architectural forms, can be geometrically represented using the relevant IFC classes. The section emphasizes that the quality of geometric support hinges on robust implementations by software vendors for exporting and importing IFC geometry, leveraging the appropriate representation methods. The depth of IFC's geometric capabilities, as elucidated in this section, underscores its potential to meet the diverse requirements across the construction industry, enabling seamless information exchange and model reuse.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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