Skip to main content

Alliance between Bentley and Trimble

A strategic alliance has been established by Bentley and Trimble – Mike Woof and Guy Woodford report A major move in the construction software sector has been seen following the announcement of a strategic alliance between Bentley Systems and Trimble. Both companies have been acquiring smaller firms and expanding their product portfolios and have worked together in the past but this new development will result in far closer integration.This alliance between Trimble and Bentley aims to create a new benchmark
January 2, 2013 Read time: 3 mins

A strategic alliance has been established by Bentley and Trimble – Mike Woof and Guy Woodford report

A major move in the construction software sector has been seen following the announcement of a strategic alliance between 4019 Bentley Systems and 2122 Trimble. Both companies have been acquiring smaller firms and expanding their product portfolios and have worked together in the past but this new development will result in far closer integration.

This alliance between Trimble and Bentley aims to create a new benchmark for construction and operations quality, efficiency and safety. According to Bentley, its strategic alliance with Trimble will deliver, “…seamless exchange of information,” between virtual and onsite elements of large infrastructure projects. Contractors will be able to use Trimble’s field positioning technologies, such as robotic total stations, 3D laser scanners, and global navigation satellite system (GNSS) positioning solutions, along with Bentley’s information modelling software with its work sharing and dynamic feedback securely managed in ProjectWise.

Bentley chief executive Greg Bentley said, “In working with Trimble, whose leading-edge technologies many of our major project delivery user organisations already rely upon, we realised there’s a combination of our offerings that can provide benefits to construction processes that neither could independently.”

Speaking during Trimble Dimensions 2012 in Las Vegas, Trimble president and chief executive Steve Berglund said the alliance with Bentley would better serve engineers and contractors by, “…creating an entire alignment between the [constructible] model and what goes on in the field”.

Also during his speech on the first day of the three-day Dimensions show, Berglund highlighted Trimble’s 73 acquisitions and joint ventures in the last 10 years. He explained., “It has not been to grow bigger, but really to fill in the gaps of technology, domain and, if necessary, product - with the last five years really being heavily focused on airing software capabilities. What we don’t have we go and get to fill in a need for the user.”

Berglund said he expected Trimble, which has 6,400 employees and now operates in 33 countries worldwide, to achieve around US$2 billion turnover in 2012. He added, “Since 1999 as a company we have grown at 17% a year roughly which, with a few really rocky years thrown in there, is a pretty significant growth rate.”

Stressing the importance of Trimble’s Sitech dealerships, Berglund said, “Sitech is an expression of our need to go to market in a new creative fashion. It is one brand worldwide. This is going to be a key element for us. It’s not just coming up with the technology, not just coming up with project solutions, but also coming up with creative and effective mechanisms for getting to market.”

Berglund said the five major forces at work influencing construction industry working practices were sensor development; the proliferation of digital data; improved software intelligence; enhanced connectivity; and visualisation through 3D construction modelling.

On the importance of BIM (Building Information Modelling), he added: “It’s something we have invested a great deal of money on in in the last two years. We have invested aggressively and will continue to
do so.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Trimble’s innovation with new technology
    January 11, 2019
    Trimble is developing highly advanced technologies for the construction and quarrying sectors – Mike Woof writes Trimble is working on a number of highly innovative technologies that could revolutionise the construction and aggregates production sectors. Perhaps the most eye-catching of all of these innovations is for the autonomous compactor and dozer system Trimble is in the process of developing at present. Scott Crozier is general manager of Trimble’s general construction division. He said that whi
  • Plain sailing for Caterpillar’s PM 300 series
    February 22, 2019
    Caterpillar’s revamped small cold planers have upped the stakes in the urban refurbishing market. World Highways deputy editor David Arminas recently caught up with A.J. Lee, global segment manager, on Spain’s Costa del Sol
  • HxGN Live 2014: Hexagon CEO lays out firm’s machine control vision
    June 5, 2014
    Hexagon CEO and president Ola Rollén has outlined the company and its global brand network’s vision for the future of mining and construction machine control. Speaking during a Hexagon media luncheon Q&A during the four-day HxGN Live 2014 conference being staged at the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas, Rollén emphasised the strength of Hexagon’s Mining Division which currently consists of Leica Geosystems surveying equipment; SAFEmine mine safety and collision avoidance systems; Devex and Leica Geosystems Minin
  • Trimble’s new package boosts piling accuracy; productivity
    October 1, 2014
    Trimble is now offering a dedicated, land-based 3D machine control system for use with a variety of piling machine makes and models. The DPS900 Piling System is said to boost accuracy and allows piling contractors to increase efficiency, taking over from less accurate manual alignment techniques that also take more time for set-up procedures and increase the risk of errors. The firm says that the DPS900 system means contractors can take advantage of accurate positioning and automated reporting to ensure