2004
DOI: 10.1201/9780203023426
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eWork and eBusiness in Architecture, Engineering and Construction

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Cited by 9 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…By implementing the criteria of the health and safety regulations [ 5 ] and integrating the assessment methodology into the model itself [ 75 ], with the color code shown in Table 1 , it is possible to comply with the legal requirements for risk assessment and its integration of the BIM methodology [ 29 ], enabling full integration in road projects carried out with BIM. This will allow obtaining the general advantages pointed out by Aires et al [ 59 ], in addition to the specific ones indicated by [ 60 ] when carrying out simulations and by Azhar et al [ 2 ] when using 3D models for the case of road projects, whose benefits have been demonstrated by Cortés Pérez et al [ 32 ] in the case of buildings, representing a fundamental step towards establishing the data structure and specific processes required for BIM in linear infrastructures as indicated by Dikbas et al [ 43 ], facilitating the integration of health and safety in strategies such as those of Great Britain [ 25 ] or Germany [ 26 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…By implementing the criteria of the health and safety regulations [ 5 ] and integrating the assessment methodology into the model itself [ 75 ], with the color code shown in Table 1 , it is possible to comply with the legal requirements for risk assessment and its integration of the BIM methodology [ 29 ], enabling full integration in road projects carried out with BIM. This will allow obtaining the general advantages pointed out by Aires et al [ 59 ], in addition to the specific ones indicated by [ 60 ] when carrying out simulations and by Azhar et al [ 2 ] when using 3D models for the case of road projects, whose benefits have been demonstrated by Cortés Pérez et al [ 32 ] in the case of buildings, representing a fundamental step towards establishing the data structure and specific processes required for BIM in linear infrastructures as indicated by Dikbas et al [ 43 ], facilitating the integration of health and safety in strategies such as those of Great Britain [ 25 ] or Germany [ 26 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The information structure of linear infrastructure in BIM models differs substantially from that of buildings, which requires specific processes [ 43 ]. An example of this is that the information exchange standard (IFC) is almost two decades old, but road information was not incorporated until less than three years ago, as anticipated [ 44 ].…”
Section: State Of the Artmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It will affect many states and patterns of jobs, and cities will turn into electronic cities, the shape of the town will be expressed in the form of virtual reality, and the architectural thought will transform from traditional buildings to a new view through transitional training stages, at the climax of which the computer replaces formal appearances for buildings such as libraries, commercial centers, lecture halls, classrooms, entertainment halls, cinema, and theater. Stores, catalogs, bibliographies, and drawing tables will disappear 6,17,[20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34] . With the spread of electronic uses, all fields of the era were formulated by adding the letter "e" before it in the English language, for example, e-government, e-marketing, e-Learning, e-commerce, e-mail... etc.…”
Section: Architectural Space and The Transition From The Age Of The M...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Firms can engage with multiple e-commerce modes to form their international business. Major types of e-commerce are discussed below (Ash and Burn, 2003;Laudon and Traver, 2009;Turban et al, 2010;Dikbas and Scherer, 2004):…”
Section: Dynamic Capabilities and E-commercementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Specifically, from a construction industry point of view, the effective management of information is a key factor in improving quality, cost efficiency and shortened project delivery times. In information intense environments the implementation of a coherent supply strategy embedded in e-commerce is vital for competitive advantage (Dikbas and Scherer, 2004). Eight unique features of ecommerce technology identified by Laudon and Traver (2009) (see Table 2) reinforce the potential of the e-commerce technology to develop dynamic capabilities to assist construction firms to create competitive advantage in their international business.…”
Section: Dynamic Capabilities Embedded Through the Coupling Of Supplymentioning
confidence: 99%