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ISO 12006-2 and IFC – prerequisites for coordination of standards for classification and interoperability

Ekholm, Anders LU (2005) In Electronic Journal of Information Technologies in Construction 10(2005/19). p.275-289
Abstract
There are two major candidates for Core Ontologies for the construction and facilities management sector, the ISO 12006-2 Framework for classification of information, and the Industry Foundation Classes, IFC. ISO 12006-2 has been developed to harmonize different national and regional classification systems. It is applied world wide in the development of classification systems for everyday use in the construction industry. The IFCs are intended to enable effective information sharing within the AEC/FM industry, but are still mainly at a prototype stage of development. The standards have similar objectives but show fundamental differences in semantics and structure. This work compares the standards and points out similarities and... (More)
There are two major candidates for Core Ontologies for the construction and facilities management sector, the ISO 12006-2 Framework for classification of information, and the Industry Foundation Classes, IFC. ISO 12006-2 has been developed to harmonize different national and regional classification systems. It is applied world wide in the development of classification systems for everyday use in the construction industry. The IFCs are intended to enable effective information sharing within the AEC/FM industry, but are still mainly at a prototype stage of development. The standards have similar objectives but show fundamental differences in semantics and structure. This work compares the standards and points out similarities and differences, firstly in order to understand their structure, and secondly to initiate a discussion about the need and the possibility to co-ordinate them. An integration of IFC with ISO 12006-2 would facilitate and speed up the application in everyday practise of object-based information management. According to the documentation, the starting point of IFC was to reject classification, and therefore integration with ISO 12006-2 would require a major shift of approach. Development of a common meta model, a generic domain model, and a coordinated domain framework are con-sidered necessary tasks. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Electronic Journal of Information Technologies in Construction
volume
10
issue
2005/19
pages
15 pages
publisher
International Council for Research and Innovation in Building and Construction, CIB
external identifiers
  • scopus:26844580927
ISSN
1400-6529
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
5eab5b65-40e8-424e-86cd-954c4fc28c6c (old id 929091)
alternative location
https://www.itcon.org/papers/2005_19.content.06433.pdf
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 16:21:53
date last changed
2022-04-15 03:59:04
@article{5eab5b65-40e8-424e-86cd-954c4fc28c6c,
  abstract     = {{There are two major candidates for Core Ontologies for the construction and facilities management sector, the ISO 12006-2 Framework for classification of information, and the Industry Foundation Classes, IFC. ISO 12006-2 has been developed to harmonize different national and regional classification systems. It is applied world wide in the development of classification systems for everyday use in the construction industry. The IFCs are intended to enable effective information sharing within the AEC/FM industry, but are still mainly at a prototype stage of development. The standards have similar objectives but show fundamental differences in semantics and structure. This work compares the standards and points out similarities and differences, firstly in order to understand their structure, and secondly to initiate a discussion about the need and the possibility to co-ordinate them. An integration of IFC with ISO 12006-2 would facilitate and speed up the application in everyday practise of object-based information management. According to the documentation, the starting point of IFC was to reject classification, and therefore integration with ISO 12006-2 would require a major shift of approach. Development of a common meta model, a generic domain model, and a coordinated domain framework are con-sidered necessary tasks.}},
  author       = {{Ekholm, Anders}},
  issn         = {{1400-6529}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2005/19}},
  pages        = {{275--289}},
  publisher    = {{International Council for Research and Innovation in Building and Construction, CIB}},
  series       = {{Electronic Journal of Information Technologies in Construction}},
  title        = {{ISO 12006-2 and IFC – prerequisites for coordination of standards for classification and interoperability}},
  url          = {{https://www.itcon.org/papers/2005_19.content.06433.pdf}},
  volume       = {{10}},
  year         = {{2005}},
}