Skip to main content

BIM pilot project for Peri in Germany

Peri is showcasing one of its latest contract wins on its stand at bauma 2016 as part of a focus on projects which aims to demonstrate the company’s wider capabilities. The formwork specialist recently won a contract with joint venture contractor Max Bögl / Porr on the Filstal railway bridge, a pilot project for the use of building information modelling (BIM). The Filstal bridge, which is on the new high-speed line between Stuttgart and Ulm, is one of four projects chosen by Germany’s Federal Ministry of Tr
April 12, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
The Filstal railway bridge is one of four BIM pilot infrastructure projects in Germany

298 Peri is showcasing one of its latest contract wins on its stand at bauma 2016 as part of a focus on projects which aims to demonstrate the company’s wider capabilities. The formwork specialist recently won a contract with joint venture contractor Max Bögl / Porr on the Filstal railway bridge, a pilot project for the use of building information modelling (BIM).

The Filstal bridge, which is on the new high-speed line between Stuttgart and Ulm, is one of four projects chosen by Germany’s Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure (BMVI) to investigate the benefits of BIM. The foundations for the bridge are in place, with Peri currently working on the designs for the pier formwork.

Used to some extent in markets including the UK and US, BIM is a fast-developing technology that Peri expects to spread to other global markets. “BIM is a big topic for us: in the future companies will use BIM technology more and more,” said Peri marketing specialist Martina Pankoke.
Peri’s head of engineering tools & innovation, Jochen Köhler, hopes that BIM will help improve safety as well as bringing time efficiencies through clash detection, which is a more generally understood benefit of BIM. “We want to provide a check list for the climbing formwork so that the person responsible knows exactly what needs to be checked before anyone goes on that scaffold,” said Köhler.

The BIM safety feature would see information such as a check list, assembly information and a sign-off form attached to the BIM model. Other related developments could include the use of QR codes on bespoke elements that would inform the formwork contractor where the element should go, and how it would be installed.

Köhler sees the shift from current practices to the use of BIM as a significant one, comparable to the move from hand-drafted designs to CAD.

“We don’t know how we will be working with BIM in five years, no one knows, but we do know that we have to start now,” he concluded.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Topcon launches “Technology Roadshow” for advanced machine automation systems
    April 10, 2014
    What’s the best way to get technology to the end-user? Topcon believes it has the answer with the 2014 edition of the Topcon Technology Roadshow, previewed for industry editors this week in Livermore, Calif.
  • Precision road construction in Romania
    October 27, 2021
    Austrian contractor PORR is setting new trends with its work on the Sibiu highway in Romania
  • Pilosio Building Peace Awards event attracts high profile speakers
    November 10, 2015
    Actress Sharon Stone challenged guests at the fifth annual awards in Milan to “build me a school”; they accepted. World Highways was there. What does it take to galvanise people into action to help people in need, especially refugees during a time of conflict – as in Syria now? For some it has been the recent media stories – and distressing images – of the child Aylan Kurdi, a three-year old Syrian refugee whose lifeless body lay face down on a beach in Turkey.
  • Bitumen technology: from potholes to PMB plants
    November 21, 2014
    This month we look at how warm mix is helping to pave dirt roads, a new way to tackle potholes, and bring news of a new distribution centre for the UK - Kristina Smith reports The creation of a new mix design, incorporating MWV’s warm mix additive Evotherm, is providing cost-effective solutions for dirt roads in the US’s Charleston County. The first stretch to be paved with the new porous paving in April this year, Joseph White Road in the town of Adams Run, resulted in the estimated US$1.1 million construc