Advanced Data Governance (ISO 19650) refers to structured management of digital information in construction projects, ensuring data accuracy, accessibility, and security throughout the project lifecycle. It aligns with international standards for information management. CDE Automation streamlines the use of a Common Data Environment (CDE), automating data sharing, collaboration, and document control among project stakeholders. Together, they enhance efficiency, reduce errors, and support compliance in construction design projects.
Advanced Data Governance (ISO 19650) refers to structured management of digital information in construction projects, ensuring data accuracy, accessibility, and security throughout the project lifecycle. It aligns with international standards for information management. CDE Automation streamlines the use of a Common Data Environment (CDE), automating data sharing, collaboration, and document control among project stakeholders. Together, they enhance efficiency, reduce errors, and support compliance in construction design projects.
What is ISO 19650 and why is it important for data governance in BIM projects?
ISO 19650 is an international standard for managing information throughout the lifecycle of a built asset using a Common Data Environment, providing a governance framework for roles, processes, and data quality.
What is a Common Data Environment (CDE)?
A central, secure workspace where project data is stored, organized, and shared with controlled access, versioning, metadata, and audit trails.
How does data governance fit into ISO 19650?
Data governance defines who can access data, how data is named and structured, and how information is quality-checked, versioned, and managed within ISO 19650 workflows.
What is CDE automation?
Automation uses tools and workflows to automatically handle data tasks in the CDE—such as status changes, approvals, publishing, and notifications—reducing manual effort.
What are common information requirements artifacts in ISO 19650?
Artifacts include information requirements frameworks (e.g., EIRs or BEP), Asset Information Requirements (AIR), and project deliverables that specify data formats, timing, and quality criteria.