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How companies can move from chaotic design to a controlled BIM process

How companies can move from chaotic design to a controlled BIM process

In most design organizations, BIM exists only formally: some departments work in Revit, others continue producing documentation in AutoCAD, models are stored on network drives, and standards are just 40-page PDFs that are remembered once a year.
As a result, each project becomes its own coordinate system, with rules and approaches changing from one project to another.

To make BIM a real tool rather than just a set of files, companies need to establish a unified model management cycle, starting from the internal data structure and ending with quality control before issuing documentation.

Standards — the foundation of the entire process

Standards are not only about naming conventions and specification formatting. They include:

  • Parameter structures and data completion requirements
  • Rules for model exchange between departments
  • Responsibility for data quality
  • Update schedules and deadlines

A strong standard doesn’t limit work; on the contrary, it reduces routine tasks and helps teams work faster.

CDE as the “single source of truth”

Storing models on a network drive is a thing of the past.
CDE platforms (Vitro-CAD, Autodesk Docs, SODIS FM for operations) create the correct data architecture:

  • Versions are never lost
  • You can see who changed what and when
  • Working with outdated files is eliminated
  • Managing issue logs and issuing documentation becomes easier

BIM coordination as a regular process

Model checking is not just something done before submission.
Companies that build a sustainable BIM process implement:

  • Weekly checklist-based reviews
  • Regular reports on model quality
  • Parameter completion control
  • Clash and interference management

Training — not a one-time event, but a knowledge ecosystem

New employees, specialists with different experience levels, and new tools require a continuous adaptation line.
This includes:

  • Internal training courses
  • Libraries of standard solutions
  • Guidelines and manuals
  • Hands-on workshops

How NLB Company helps embed this process

NLB Company implements BIM so that it works in production, not just sits on a shelf:

  • Develops corporate standards
  • Configures CDE (Vitro-CAD, SODIS, Autodesk)
  • Conducts regular model audits
  • Trains teams on real projects
  • Creates scripts and tools for automation