Tag Archives | AEC Forensics

Construction Experts Using iPads For Field Inspections

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Although most people associate the word forensics with legal issues, usually criminal proceedings, the word actually has a broader meaning. In my opinion, the role of forensics in the AEC (architecture, engineering and construction) industry is to apply scholarly and/or scientific methodology and norms to understanding the underlying facts regarding the built environment. (See AECForensics: About.) During on-site inspections, we are looking at multiple conditions in exacting detail, collecting and analyzing tremendous amounts of data, and trying to distill the observations into something meaningful. Typically this means taking a lot of pictures and writing down lots of notes, filling in checklists, drawing on and annotating plans, details, etc. I personally have around 10 pieces of paper I’m working off of at a a single unit during visual inspections. Constant flipping back and forth through several pages, reviewing documents, making notes – it is easy to become distracted from the matter at hand: inspecting! As predicted, inspectors in the AEC Forensics industry are adopting the iPad for use in the field. While several applications have been developed for the AEC industry, including Vela’s suite of applications, this is the first I’ve heard of a company that provides forensic services adopting the technology. The company is D 7 Consulting Inc. and they were recently profiled by CIO Magazine offering lessons learned from their transition:

Nearly a dozen iPads have been put to work on rooftops and in basements at dirty construction sites, from San Francisco to Las Vegas. Joseph Daniels, president of D7 Consulting, a quality-assurance consulting firm, deployed them only a couple of weeks ago—and has already learned a lot.D7 Consulting wanted to change the way its field employees made out reports, discarding pen and paper for electronic data entry that taps into a cloud service. And so D7 Consulting entered and won a promotional contest put on by Box.net, a hosted content management services provider, for free 3G iPads and service. Earlier this summer, D7 Consulting employees tore the wrappings from the shiny iPads, signaling the beginning of a two-phase rollout. D7 Consulting is now in the middle of the process, with half of the 20 iPads in the field today and the other half set to go there soon.

As part of the promotion with Box.net, the company that provided the iPads and facilitated remote access to cloud-based file storage, Snippies shot a video outlining the process. Inspectors, welcome to the future: For more information and future updates, visit D 7 Consulting’s Blog (written by CEO Joseph Daniels), or follow them on Twitter (@d7consulting).


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Announcement: AECForensics.com is the source for Architectural, Engineering and Construction News

Below is a quote from the announcement at AECForensics.com:

After a lot of work behind the scenes, I’m proud to announce that AEC Forensics is now fully operational. I have scoured the internet and continue to do so daily, selecting and curating the content that appears here. Since no other website has risen to the challenge of compiling news about our industry (construction defect litigation, construction law, bad faith, green forensics, etc.), I have thrown my hat in the ring. Those of you that know me personally are aware that I am a full time employee and shareholder of KPA Associates, Inc., a San Diego-based architectural firm that provides expert witness testimony in construction defect matters, in addition to ADA compliance and residential/commercial/institutional design services. In other words, this website is an avocation for me and something I pursue solely because of my passion for this industry. Admittedly not everything you find on this site is strictly related to construction defect litigation. (Please visit the About page for a more thorough explanation.)

Let me explain a little bit more about why I’m doing this and how. First, this is truly a labor of love. I have been working in the AEC forensics field for over a decade, yet nobody has a decent run-down of relevant information about the industry. We in this industry are by nature, obsessed with information, but it almost seems as if there is an elitist approach to knowledge management in the construction defect realm. Plus a lot of people are understandably reluctant to openly publish their opinion for free when the person is billing north of $150 per hour for their opinion. Me? I’m no expert. I just work for one. Next, I want to discuss a little bit about how I am doing this. Most importantly, if it were not for WordPress (specifically version 3.0), none of this would be feasible within the limited amount of time I have. I have spent years developing a workflow that works for me with regard to reviewing, analyzing, categorizing, publishing and distributing information from online sources. At the heart of it all is Google Reader. Using the tagging functions, I’m able to quickly review, annotate and categorize articles from thousands of sources. The tagged items are then fed through various plugins as drafts in WordPress. I manually edit each post one at a time before publishing. From there, Hootsuite and some other tools distribute the content through various channels. What is important is that I have culled thousands of posts daily to find the truly noteworthy articles (in my opinion) that pertain to the topics I’m interested in. In a way, I’m trying to keep true to the original notions of blogging – as in weblog, or a log chronicling web-based publications of interest. That’s all I’ve got for now. Time for dinner and some more time with the family…


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