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Scientometric analysis of BIM-based research in construction engineering and management

Ruoyu Jin (School of Environment and Technology, University of Brighton, Brighton, UK)
Yang Zou (Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand)
Kassim Gidado (School of Environment and Technology, University of Brighton, Brighton, UK)
Phillip Ashton (School of Environment and Technology, University of Brighton, Brighton, UK)
Noel Painting (School of Environment and Technology, University of Brighton, Brighton, UK)

Engineering, Construction and Architectural Management

ISSN: 0969-9988

Article publication date: 18 June 2019

Issue publication date: 30 August 2019

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to summarize the latest research of BIM adoption in construction engineering and management (CEM) and propose research directions for future scholarly work. During the recent decade, building information modeling (BIM) has gained increasing applications and research interest in the construction industry. Although there have been review-based studies that summarized BIM-based research in the overall architecture, engineering and construction (AEC) area, there is limited review that evaluates the current stage of BIM-based research specifically in the CEM sub-area.

Design/methodology/approach

CEM falls into the scope of AEC. It involves construction-related tasks, activities and processes (e.g. scheduling and cost estimates), issues (e.g. constructability), as well as human factors (e.g. collaboration). This study adopted a holistic literature review approach that incorporates bibliometric search and scientometric analysis. A total of 276 articles related to BIM applied in CEM were selected from Scopus as the literature sample for the scientometric analysis.

Findings

Some key CEM research areas (e.g. CEM pedagogy, integrated project delivery, lean and off-site construction) were identified and evaluated. Research trends in these areas were identified, and analyses were carried out with regard to how they could be integrated with BIM. For example, BIM, as a data repository for ACE facilities, has substantial potential to be integrated with a variety of other digital technologies, project delivery methods and innovative construction techniques throughout the whole process of CEM.

Practical implications

As BIM is one of the key technologies and digital platforms to improve the construction productivity and collaboration, it is important for industry practitioners to be updated of the latest movement and progress of the academic research. The industry, academics and governmental authorities should work with joint effort to fill the gap by first recognizing the current needs, limitations and trends of applying BIM in the construction industry. For example, it needs more understanding about how to address technical interoperability issues and how to introduce the integrated design and construction delivery approach for BIM implementation under the UK BIM Level 2/3 framework.

Originality/value

This study contributed to the body of knowledge in BIM by proposing a framework leading to research directions including the differences of BIM effects between design-bid-build and other fast-track project delivery methods; the integration of BIM with off-site construction; and BIM pedagogy in CEM. It also addressed the need to investigate the similarities and differences between academia and industry toward perceiving the movement of BIM in construction field work.

Keywords

Citation

Jin, R., Zou, Y., Gidado, K., Ashton, P. and Painting, N. (2019), "Scientometric analysis of BIM-based research in construction engineering and management", Engineering, Construction and Architectural Management, Vol. 26 No. 8, pp. 1750-1776. https://doi.org/10.1108/ECAM-08-2018-0350

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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