By George Broadbent
Partner | Twiniti AI
BIM is dead. Or alive. Or maybe both — depending on how you look at it.
Like Schrödinger’s cat, BIM exists in a quantum state: to a designer, it’s a model; to a contractor, it’s coordination; to a facility manager, it’s often just another handover file. Somewhere between theory and execution, between Revit and COBie, between project and operations — the promise of BIM has become unrecognizable.
This isn’t a funeral for BIM. It’s an acknowledgment that while BIM was transformative, it has reached the edge of its utility in the age of operational intelligence.
Today, owners, operators, and capital project leaders no longer need a 3D model with metadata.
They need a system. They need continuity.
They need an Operations Digital Twin (ODT).
Let’s be clear: Revit is not BIM. Neither is ArchiCAD, Civil 3D, or any other authoring platform. These tools are part of the BIM process — but not BIM itself. BIM was always meant to be a methodology for coordinating information across the asset lifecycle.
But somewhere along the way, BIM became a deliverable, not a process.
The moment BIM became just “the Revit model,” its value in facility operations collapsed.
This breakdown is most evident in campus-scale environments — institutional ecosystems where civil, utility, and building infrastructure must coexist in a unified operational picture.
Take a typical airport or university:
Different tools. Different teams. Different standards.
There is no single BIM model that unifies this information — because BIM was never designed to be an operational system. It was built to serve the project — not the portfolio.
As a result, owners are left with:
BIM was revolutionary in construction. But it was never built to reflect how facilities actually behave once occupied.
Operations is not a snapshot — it’s a stream:
BIM can’t handle that.
Not because it’s bad — but because it wasn’t made for it.
Facility managers, asset stewards, and capital planners need more than drawings and files.
They need systems that are:
In other words…
They need the Operations Digital Twin.
So what is an ODT?
An Operations Digital Twin is a live, integrated, and context-rich digital environment that reflects the current physical and functional state of a facility or campus.
It’s not just geometry. It’s not just a dashboard. And it’s definitely not a file.
The ODT is built on four foundational principles:
|
Aspect |
BIM Model |
Generic Digital Twin |
Operations Digital Twin (ODT) |
|
Primary Use |
Design & Construction |
Visualization / Simulation |
Operational Decision-Making |
|
Data Scope |
Geometry + limited metadata |
Varies (often siloed) |
Integrated: assets, docs, sensors, GIS |
|
Update Frequency |
Static (handover) |
Periodic or batch-fed |
Continuous, scheduled, or event-driven |
|
Tool Orientation |
Authoring tools (Revit, C3D) |
Platform-specific |
Vendor-agnostic, user-centric |
|
Target User |
AEC professionals |
IT/Analysts |
Facilities, Capital, Maintenance, Strategy |
|
System Integration |
Minimal |
Often proprietary |
Designed for interoperability |
Facilities are no longer cost centers. They are strategic assets — especially for:
All of these depend on data. But not just any data — trusted, contextual, current data.
The ODT enables:
Most importantly, it gives owners control over their environments, long after the project is complete.
Let’s not confuse critique with dismissal.
BIM moved us forward. It revolutionized how we model, coordinate, and document.
It gave us a way to think about data beyond the drawing.
But trying to use BIM as a system for operations is like trying to run a hospital with construction drawings.
BIM served the project.
ODT serves the lifecycle.
BIM is dead — not because it failed, but because it fulfilled its purpose.
Now it’s time to move on.
We need systems that speak the language of operations: uptime, access, intelligence, and action.
We need platforms that unify the past, present, and future of an asset’s lifecycle.
The future of facilities isn’t about better models.
It’s about better systems.
It’s about the Operations Digital Twin.