620 Ingenieurwissenschaften und zugeordnete Tätigkeiten
Refine
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (432) (remove)
Institute
Keywords
- Arbeitsschutz (61)
- Baustelle (53)
- Modellierung (49)
- Baubetriebslehre (43)
- Bauwerk (40)
- Verteiltes System (36)
- CAD (31)
- Finite-Elemente-Methode (24)
- Architektur (21)
- Deutschland / Baustellenverordnung (20)
Flächenmanagement in Hochschulen. Workshop zu Handlungsansätzen hochschulinterner Flächensteuerung
(2013)
Die Publikation dokumentiert die Beiträge des Workshops „Flächenmanagement in Hochschulen“ der Bauhaus-Universität Weimar, Professur Betriebswirtschaftslehre im Bauwesen, vom 19.11.2012. Insbesondere für Akteure aus Lehre, Forschung, Hochschulverwaltung, Bau- und Liegenschaftsverwaltungen sowie Politik bieten die wiedergegebenen Vorträge theoretische und praktische Anregungen für das Vorgehen bei der Steuerung hochschulinterner Flächen.
Dokumentiert werden unterschiedliche Modi zur Steuerung der Flächenressourcen. Ziel ist es dabei, die liegenschaftspolitischen Rahmenbedingungen aufzuzeigen, von denen das Flächenmanagement abhängig ist. Mit der Auswertung einer deutschlandweiten Hochschulbefragung zum Flächenmanagement wird der Status quo hochschulinterner Flächensteuerung nachgezeichnet. Es wird zuerst ein Überblick gegeben, welche Ansätze zur Optimierung der Flächen-steuerung von Hochschulen möglich sind. Hochschulvertreter von zwei staatlichen und einer privaten Hochschule stellten praktizierte Handlungsansätze für einen ressourcenschonenden Umgang mit Flächen vor und arbeiteten die aus ihrer Sicht Erfolg versprechenden Steuerungsaspekte heraus. Zusätzliche Diskussionsimpulse für die Flächensteuerung an Hochschulen bieten die Dokumentationen von Praxisbeispielen aus anderen Bereichen. Es werden das Vorgehen bei der Flächensteuerung eines Chemie- und Pharmakonzerns mit umfangreichen eigenen Forschungsaktivitäten sowie Flächenoptimierungsmaßnahmen bei Büroflächen der öffentlichen Verwaltung vorgestellt.
The Bauhaus Summer School series provides an international forum for an exchange of methods and skills related to the interaction between different disciplines of modern engineering science.
The 2012 civil engineering course was held in August over two weeks at Bauhaus-Universität Weimar. The overall aim was the exchange
of research and modern scientific approaches in the field of model validation and simulation between well-known experts acting as lecturers
and active students. Besides these educational intentions the social and cultural component of the meeting has been in the focus. 48 graduate and doctoral students from 20 different countries and 22 lecturers from 12 countries attended this summer school. Among
other aspects, this activity can be considered successful as it raised the
sensitivity towards both the significance of research in civil engineering
and the role of intercultural exchange.
This volume summarizes and publishes some of the results: abstracts
of key note papers presented by the experts and selected student
research works. The overview reflects the quality of this summer school.
Furthermore the individual contributions confirm that for active students
this event has been a research forum and a special opportunity
to learn from the experiences of the researchers in terms of methodology
and strategies for research implementation in their current work.
SYSWELD Forum 2011
(2011)
Am 25. und 26. Oktober 2011 trafen sich an der Bauhaus-Universität Weimar 70 nationale und internationale Fachleute aus Forschung und Praxis, um sich im Rahmen des vierten SYSWELD Forums über aktuelle Entwicklungen der numerischen Simulation auf dem Gebiet der Wärmebehandlung und des Schweißens auszutauschen. Die numerische Simulation im Bereich des Schweißens und der Wärmebehandlung hat sich in den letzten Jahren beachtlich weiterentwickelt und bietet ein zukunftsweisendes und innovatives Arbeitsfeld für Ingenieure.
Am 25. März 2010 veranstaltete die Professur Baubetrieb und Bauverfahren im Rahmen der jährlich stattfindenden baubetrieblichen Tagungsreihe gemeinsam mit der Arbeitsgruppe „Unikatprozesse“ in der Fachgruppe „Simulation in Produktion und Logistik“ (SPL) im Rahmen der Arbeitsgemeinschaft Simulation – ASIM einen ganztägigen Workshop mit dem Titel: „Modellierung von Prozessen zur Fertigung von Unikaten“. Viele Bauprozesse sind dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass sie Unikatcharakter besitzen. Unikate sind durch prototypische Einmaligkeit, Individualität, vielfältige Randbedingungen, einen geringen Grad an Standardisierung und Wiederholungen gekennzeichnet. Das erschwert die realitätsnahe Modellierung zur Simulation sogenannter Unikatprozesse. Dieser Besonderheit widmet sich die überwiegende Zahl der Tagungsbeiträge, die in diesem Band widergegeben sind.
Am 31. März 2008 veranstalteten die Professur Baubetrieb und Bauverfahren und die Juniorprofessur Theoretische Methoden des Projektmanagements der Bauhaus-Universität Weimar einen ganztägigen Workshop mit dem Titel: „Auf dem Weg zum digitalen (Bau-)haus-Bau“. Damit sollte die im Herbst 2007 an der Universität Kassel unter dem Titel „Simulation in der Bauwirtschaft“ begonnene Reihe von Workshops eine Fortsetzung finden. Der Schwerpunkt wurde dieses Mal auf die Simulation von Bauprozessen gesetzt – Simulation mit dem Ziel, Arbeitsvorbereitung, Bauausführung und Baustellencontrolling digital zu unterstützen.
Die aktuelle demografische Entwicklung bedingt offensichtlich auch Arbeiten in rauer Umgebung bis zur Rente mit 67, auch auf dem Bau. Das Thema liegt scheinbar nur am Rande des Baubetriebswesens. Doch obwohl es sozialpolitisch determiniert ist, hat es sehr konkret mit Gesundheitsschutz, Arbeitsschutz und Arbeitsgestaltung zu tun. Die fünfte Fachtagung 'Sicherheit auf Baustellen' stellt sich der Diskussion, wie das Rentenalter gesund erreichbar ist, was alle am Arbeitsschutz Beteiligten schon heute und auch in Zukunft dafür tun können, und hinterfragt kritisch, wie realistisch diese pauschale Forderung nach Arbeit bis 67 ist. Forderungen nach schlankeren Strukturen im Staat und das Streben nach Deregulierung haben auch zu Veränderungen in der Arbeitsschutzverwaltung des Freistaates Thüringen geführt, über die das Forum informiert.
Die Fachtagung richtete sich an Geschäftsführer, Projektleiter, Bauleiter und Projektsteuerer in Planung und Ausführung mit Beiträgen zum Nachtrags- und Änderungsmanagement am Bau, Workflow-Management in der Baupraxis, Integration von Informationsprozessen auf der Basis von Nemetschek Technologien sowie Kompetenzaufbau durch gezielte Weiterbildung.
Am Beispiel des ICE-Knotens Erfurt werden positive Erfahrungen bei der Umsetzung der Baustellenverordnung berichtet. Die Erfahrungen haben gezeigt, dass konkrete Vorgaben und das Festlegen und Fordern bestimmter Sicherheitsvorkehrungen die Sicherheit auf der Baustelle wesentlich mitbestimmen. Ein wichtiges Hilfsmittel dazu ist ein konkreter SiGe-Plan, dessen Realisierung durch permanente Sicherheitsbegehungen kontrolliert werden muss. Durch eine zielgerichtete Einflussnahme und sachgemäße Arbeitsweise der Fachfirmen wurden die Bauabläufe realisiert, ohne dass es zu schweren Unfällen und Störungen insbesondere im Bahnverkehr kam. Die Baustellenverordnung mit ihren Forderungen war dabei ein wichtiges Instrumentarium, welches durch die DB AG vollinhaltlich umgesetzt wurde.
Dieser Beitrag versucht, einige Aspekte der individuellen Lebensentwicklung mit den Möglichkeiten wirksamen Arbeitsschutzes zu verknüpfen. Er wirt damit die Frage auf, ob und wie die Sensibilisierung für Sicherheit und Gesundheitsschutz, für vorbeugende Maßnahmen und für die Akzeptanz bei den Betroffenen verbessert werden kann. Was hat Arbeitsschutz mit dem Lebensalter zu tun? Verhalten sich Routiniers im Bauwesen anders als Berufanfänger?
Bestimmungen und Anforderungen an den Entwurf von Baustelleneinrichtungen (BE), Kraneinsatzplan als Bestandteil der BE, planungstechnische Aspekte, Untersuchung von CAD-Anwendungen für die Planung von Baustelleneinrichtungen, Entwicklung eines Kraneinsatzplaners, Sicherheitsaspekte bei der Planung von Baukraneinsätzen. Es zeigte sich, dass gerade die Forderung der Betrachtung kausaler und räumlicher Abhängigkeiten mit den in der Praxis angewandten Planungswerkzeugen nicht oder nur eingeschränkt realisierbar ist. Mit dem Programm >EasyCrane TK< wird eine Möglichkeit aufgezeigt, die Erstellung von Kraneinsatzplänen effizienter und für die Umsetzung auf der Baustelle sicherer zu gestalten.
Quo vadis Arbeitsschutz?
(2005)
Speziell für die Sandwich-Platten der Außenfassade von DDR-Plattenbauten, die in ihrem Inneren in den meisten Fällen Mineralwolle (Handelsname: Kamilit) enthalten, wurden belastungsarme Abbruch- bzw. Rückbautechnologien untersucht und durch Gefahrstoffmessungen begleitet. Es werden Vorschläge für zukünftig zu bevorzugende Abbruchtechnologien unterbreitet.
Sieben Bestandsbauten der Herzogin-Anna-Amalia-Bibliothek Weimar sollten umgenutzt und durch zwei oberirdische und drei unterirdische Neubauten ergänzt werden. Im Beitrag näher beschrieben: Schadstofferkundung und Beurteilung der Gefahren der Baumaßnahmen, Sicherheitsmaßnahmen, Durchführung von Reinigungsarbeiten
The uniqueness and the long life cycle of buildings imply a dynamically modifiable building model. The technological foundation for the management of digital building models, a dynamic model management system (MMS), developed by our research group, allows to explicitly access and to modify the object model of the stored planning data. In this paper, the integration of constraints in digital building models will be shown. Constraints are conditions, which apply to the instances of domain model classes, and are defined by the user at runtime of the information system. For the expression of constraints, the Constraint Modelling Language (CML) has been developed and will be described in this paper. CML is a powerful, intuitively usable object-oriented language, which allows the expression of constraints at a high semantic level. A constrained-enabled MMS can verify, whether an instance fulfils the applying constraints. To ensure flexibility, the evaluation of constraints is not implicitly performed by the systems, but explicitly initiated by the user. A classification of constraint types and example usage scenarios are given.
Collaborative Design Processes: A Class on Concurrent Collaboration in Multidisciplinary Design
(2004)
The rise of concurrent engineering in construction demands early team formation and constant communication throughout the project life cycle, but educational models in architecture, engineering and construction have been slow to adjust to this shift in project organization. Most students in these fields spend the majority of their college years working on individual projects that do not build teamwork or communication skills. Collaborative Design Processes (CDP) is a capstone design course where students from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the University of Florida learn methods of collaborative design enhanced by the use of information technology. Students work in multidisciplinary teams to collaborate from remote locations via the Internet on the design of a facility. An innovation of this course compared to previous efforts is that students also develop process designs for the integration of technology into the work of multidisciplinary design teams. The course thus combines both active and reflective learning about collaborative design and methods. The course is designed to provide students the experience, tools, and methods needed to improve design processes and better integrate the use of technology into AEC industry work practices. This paper describes the goals, outcomes and significance of this new, interdisciplinary course for distributed AEC education. Differences from existing efforts and lessons learned to promote collaborative practices are discussed. Principal conclusions are that the course presents effective pedagogy to promote collaborative design methods, but faces challenges in both technology and in traditional intra-disciplinary training of students.
The management of resources is an essential task in each construction company. Today, ERP systems and e-Business systems are available to assist construction companies to efficiently organise the allocation of their personnel and equipment within the company, but they cannot provide the company with the idle resources for every single task that has to be performed during a construction project. Therefore, companies should have an alternative solution to better exploit expensive resources and compensate their fixed costs, but also have them available at the right time for their own business activities. This paper outlines the approach taken by the EU funded project “e-Sharing” (IST-2001-33325) to support resource management between construction companies. It will describe requirements for the management of construction resources, its core features, and the integration approach. Therefore, we will outline the approach of an integrated resource type model supporting the management and classification of construction equipment, construction tasks and qualification profiles. The development is based on a cross-domain analysis and evaluation of existing models. ...
The AEC industry is conscious of the potentials arising from the usage of mobile computer systems to increase productivity by streamlining their business processes. Discussions are no longer on whether or not to use a mobile computer solution, but rather, on how it should be used. However, the implantation process of this new technology in Architecture, Engineering and Construction (AEC) and Facility Management (FM) practise is very slow and should be improved. One way to encourage and ease the usage of mobile computer systems in AEC is a more process-oriented usability and context appropriateness of mobile computer solutions. Context-sensitivity is defined as a crucial feature to be taken into account for further research in the area of Mobile Computing. Context-sensitive, mobile IT-solutions depend on two features: (1) flexible definitions of (construction) processes describing the context and (2) tools for flexible, multi-dimensional information management representing the context. It is on this premise that the authors propose the n-dimensional data management approach for the implementation of mobile computing solutions. In this paper, we analyse working scenarios in the AEC and FM sector, defining context aspects which are transformed and formalized as dimension hierarchies of the envisaged context model.
The promise of lower costs for sensors that can be used for construction inspection means that inspectors will continue to have new choices to consider in creating inspection plans. However, these emerging inspection methods can require different activities, resources, and decisions such that it can be difficult to compare the emerging methods with other methods that satisfy the same inspection needs. Furthermore, the context in which inspection is performed can significantly influence how well certain inspection methods are suited for a given set of goals for inspection. Context information, such as weather, security, and the regulatory environment, can be used to understand what information about a component should be collected and how an inspection should be performed. The research described in this paper is aimed at developing an approach for comparing and selecting inspection plans. This approach consists of (1) refinement of given goals for inspection, if necessary, in order to address any additional information needs due to a given context and in order to reach a level of detail that can be addressed by an inspection activity; (2) development of constraints to describe how an inspection should be achieved; (3) matching of goals to available inspection methods, and generation of activities and resource plans in order to address the goals; and (4) selection of an inspection plan from among the possible plans that have been identified. The authors illustrate this approach with observations made at a local construction site.
The worldwide growth of communication networks and associated technologies provide the basic infrastructure for new ways of executing the engineering process. Collaboration amongst team members seperated in time and location is of particular importance. Two broad themes can be recognized in research pertaining to distributed collaboration. One theme focusses on the technical and technological aspects of distributed work, while the other emphasises human aspects thereof. The case of finite element structural analysis in a distributed collaboratory is examined in this paper. An approach is taken which has its roots in human aspects of the structural analysis task. Based on experience of how structural engineers currently approach and execute this task while utilising standard software designed for use on local workstations only, criteria are stated for a software architechture that could support collaborative structural analysis. Aspects of a pilot application and the results of qualitative performance measurements are discussed.
As computer programs become ever more complex, software development has shifted from focusing on programming towards focusing on integration. This paper describes a simulation access language (SimAL) that can be used to access and compose software applications over the Internet. Specifically, the framework is developed for the integration of tools for project management applications. The infrastructure allows users to specify and to use existing heterogeneous tools (e.g., Microsoft Project, Microsoft Excel, Primavera Project Planner, and AutoCAD) for simulation of project scenarios. This paper describes the components of the SimAL language and the implementation efforts required in the development of the SimAL framework. An illustration example bringing on-line weather forecasting service for project scheduling and management applications is provided to demonstrate the use of the simulation language and the infrastructure framework.
All construction project are constrained by their schedules, budgets and specifications, and safety and environmental regulations. These constraints made construction management more complex and difficult. At the same time, many historical data that can support the decisions in the future are kept in construction enterprises,. To use the historical data effectively and efficiently, it is essential to apply the data warehouse and data mining technologies. This paper introduces a research which aims to develop a data warehouse system according to the requirements of construction enterprises and use data mining technology to learn useful information and knowledge from the data warehouse system. The design, the development and the application of this system are detailedly introduced in this paper.
The planning of projects in building engineering is a complex process which is characterized by a dynamical composition and many modifications during the definition and execution time of processes. For a computer-aided and network-based cooperation a formal description of the planning process is necessary. In the research project “Relational Process Modelling in Cooperative Building Planning” a process model is described by three parts: an organizational structure with participants, a building structure with states and a process structure with activities. This research project is part of the priority program 1103 “Network-Based Cooperative Planning Processes in Structural Engineering” promoted by the German Research Foundation (DFG). Planning processes in civil engineering can be described by workflow graphs. The process structure describes the logical planning process and can be formally defined by a bipartite graph. This structure consists of activities, transitions and relationships between activities and transitions. In order to minimize errors at execution time of a planning process a consistent and structurally correct process model must be guaranteed. This contribution considers the concept and the algorithms for checking the consistency and the correctness of the process structure.
This paper describes monitoring of the in-valley discharge and underground water level at the place where the tunnel will be constructed and also, the numerical analysis for prediction applying the Tank Model and Linear Filter Method to calculate the prediction. The application of these analyses has actually allowed the change of underground water level to be grasped and more effective information system to be established by comparing the real-time monitoring data with the real-time calculation of prediction.
Information science researchers and developers have spent many years addressing the problem of retrieving the exact information needed and using it for analysis purposes. In informationseeking dialogues, the user, i.e. construction project manager or supplier, often asks questions about specific aspects of the tasks they want to perform. But most of the time it is difficult for the software systems to unambiguously understand their overall intentions. The existence of information tunnels (Tannenbaum 2002) aggravates this phenomenon. This study includes a detailed case study of the material management process in the construction industry. Based on this case study, the structure of a formal user model for information retrieval in construction management is proposed. This prototype user model will be incorporated into the system design for construction information management and retrieval. This information retrieval system is a user-centered product based on the development of a user configurable visitor mechanism for managing and retrieving project information without worrying too much about the underlying data structure of the database system. An executable UML model combined with OODB is used to reduce the ambiguity in the user's intentions and to achieve user satisfaction.
At the start of the conceptual design process, designers start to give tangible form to their thoughts by sketching. This helps with reasoning and communicates ideas to other members of the team. Sketches are gradually worked up into more formal drawings which are then passed to the other stages of the design process. There are however some problems with basing early ideas on sketching. For example, due to their ad-hoc nature, sketches tend only to be diagrammatic representations and so designers cannot be sure that their ideas are feasible and what is being proposed meets the constraints described in the client brief. This can result in designers wasting time working up ideas which prove to be unsuitable. Also the process of constraint checking is complex and time consuming and so designers tend limit their search of possible options and instead choose satisfying rather than good solutions. This paper describes the INTEGRA project which examines the role of sketching in early conceptual design and how this can be linked to other aspects of the process and particularly automated constraint checking using an IT based approach. The focus for the work is the design of framed buildings. A multi-disciplinary approach has been adopted and the work has been undertaken in close collaboration with practising designers and clients.
In the AEC (Architecture / Engineering / Construction) industry a number of individuals and organisations collaborate and work jointly on a construction project. The resulting consortium has large pool of expertise and experience and can be defined as a Virtual Organisation (VO) formed for the duration of the project. VOs are electronically networked organisations where IT and web based communication technology play an important role in coordinating various activities of these organisations. This paper describes the design, development and implementation of a Grid enabled application called the Product Supplier Catalogue Database (PSCD) which supports collaborative working in consortia. As part of the Grid-enabling process, specialised metadata is being developed to enable PSCD to effectively utilise Grid middleware such as Globus and Java CoG toolkits. We also describe our experience whilst designing, developing and deploying the security service of the application using the Globus Security Interface (GSI).
Integrated Engineering Workflow focused on the Structural Engineering in the Industrial Environment
(2004)
The engineering and construction industry has been slow to exploit the full potential of information technology. The industry is highly fragmented, price sensitive, risk-adverse, and profit margins are small. Each project is unique with a small amount of technological innovation opportunities to capitalise on from one project to the next. Technological innovations that have been taking place are just simulating the old traditional paper workflow. Engineering information in digital form is being conveyed using traditional paper representations, which have to be interpreted by humans before the information can be used in other applications, thereby creating ‘islands of information’. It can be seen that poorly implemented IT strategies are duplicating paperwork, rather than reducing or eliminating it (Crowley et al., 2000). This paper will introduce the Integrated Engineering Workflow (IEW) concept to re-organise a structural discipline working on multi-disciplinary projects so as to maximise the advantages offered by new information technology.