Skip to main content

All change – the evolution of data

Embracing change; handling data as an evolutionary process, Mike Woof writes. Bentley Systems believes that it is on the cusp of a revolutionary step in computing that will boost the working efficiency of companies right across industry. Bhupinder Singh, chief products officer at Bentley Systems explained that its key advance will allow firms to utilise what they already have, but more efficiently. He said, “Companies are effectively analysing just 1% of their data. The rest is ‘dark data’ that is stored
January 24, 2018 Read time: 4 mins
Bentley’s new Azure package is one of a range of new developments from the firm
Embracing change; handling data as an evolutionary process, Mike Woof writes


4019 Bentley Systems believes that it is on the cusp of a revolutionary step in computing that will boost the working efficiency of companies right across industry. Bhupinder Singh, chief products officer at Bentley Systems explained that its key advance will allow firms to utilise what they already have, but more efficiently. He said, “Companies are effectively analysing just 1% of their data. The rest is ‘dark data’ that is stored but not used.”

However, the new iModel 2.0 cloud platform and its first new service, iModelHub, now being introduced by Bentley could deliver a quantum leap. This offers users of the ProjectWise design integration services package the option to speed up the process of going digital.

The existing ProjectWise Design Integration service from Bentley Systems has proven highly successful. This package manages file-based workflows for project delivery and is able to cope with the often disconnected nature of infrastructure project work packaging and collaboration. By adding the new iModelHub package Bentley is benefiting from its partnership with Microsoft for the Azure cloud services system. The firm claims that this can deliver a connected project that synchronises project changes, and automatically updates a composite project iModel. The system is said to allow for comprehensive and continuous design reviews, highlighting progress and risks in digital workflows.

The iModelHub package tracks project changes on a timeline, and notifies project participants, based on their ProjectWise workflow configuration, about the availability of relevant changes. Users can choose to synchronise from particular timeline milestones, allowing them to understand the impact of ongoing changes.

Keith Bentley, chief technology officer at Bentley Systems provided some context to this launch. He said that in the early 1980s as a student he listened to a presentation on the coming importance of personal computers by one Bill Gates, which influenced him strongly and led to the founding of Bentley Systems. “It was a once in a lifetime experience,” he said, adding that this latest advance will be just as significant. “Not everyone is lucky enough to have two once in a lifetime experiences,” he joked.

Bentley said that the firm has made major progress and explained, “Back in 2009 we introduced iModels.” This delivered a step change and he continued, “It began to be used outside of design.”

Bentley explained that the original iModel 1.0 was basically a container for information. It could be used to store images, 2D and 3D files and a range of other information. However he explained that the iModel 2.0 is also a relational database and said that is advance is about ‘embracing change’.

“Most people think of the cloud as a large supercomputer with almost infinite power.”

Although iModels are now widely used in industry, Bentley said that the way these are utilised leave much to be desired, “The problem is their data is stored by a programmer who has only one intention.”

He continued, “We can’t leave data in this tangled mess. We need to be able to use it. Change is not an inconvenient truth we can ignore.”

The iModelHub offers an efficient solution and he said, “We need a place to store this change. It is not there to store iModels, it is there to store change.”

Rather than containing files in the conventional sense, the iModelHub is the repository of change. Bentley said, “If iModelHub stores the change, where is the master copy? My master copy is the timeline. We have to embrace change. Let’s visualise that change and show what’s different.”

To provide the full range of analytics across multiple projects, and for connected assets, iModel agents can be programmed for each subject. Users can be notified of project-level changes by iModelHub and the system filters updates, providing accessibility of infrastructure engineering model data for compliance and safety. Capacity is less of an issue and he said, “Another important place where iModels are going to be stored is in the cloud.”

The technology is still in development but Bentley said, “We are working on going live with its iModelBridges solution at the beginning of next year.”

He added, “I think it’s the most exciting thing we have ever done.”

Related Content

  • Zipping up road lanes
    September 28, 2018
    QMB has a Lindsay Road Zipper on duty near Montreal. World Highways deputy editor David Arminas climbed aboard As vice president of Canadian barrier specialist QMB, based in Laval, Quebec, Marc-Andre Seguin is sanguine about the future for moveable barriers. On the one hand, it looks good. The oft-stated advantage of moveable barriers is that the systems are cheaper to install than adding a lane or two to a highway or bridge. Directional changes to lanes can boost volume on a road without disrupting tra
  • More satellites, more signals
    July 20, 2012
    Greater GPS accuracy suggests closer tolerances for surveying and machine control functions What happens in the future for GPS surveying and machine control could depend on satellite choice and signals. Right now there are around 30 satellites in orbit, largely built by the US, but by 2012 that could rise to 120 as Europe, China, India and Russia fully enter the market. A chequered history has faced the European's Galileo system. At long last, the finance appears to be in place and the European Commission a
  • Berco bounces back
    December 16, 2021
    The global Italian undercarriage manufacturer is forging ahead with a major lean manufacturing transformation that is already seeing results. David Arminas reports from the company’s 500,000m² plant in Copparo.
  • Safe and efficient urban mobility for Africa
    May 17, 2023
    Transitioning to zero-carbon transport globally is essential to keep climate change in check. Yet seven years after the Paris Climate Agreement, transport emissions are still rising. In a new op-ed, Nina Elter argues that a radical shift in our approach to transportation sustainability is required. Every year, governments around the world invest more than US$700 billion in road infrastructure. While these investments yield significant economic and social returns, transport continues to generate large costs on societies, in the form of harmful emissions, traffic injuries and lost time due to congestion.