Download - Be2camp Welcome
Welcome ….
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Our sponso
rs
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Our partn
ers
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Why Web 2.0 and the Built Environment?
• “Construction is technophobic”
– Not entirely true
• CAD
• Fax
• Mobile telecommunications
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Why Web 2.0 and the Built Environment?
• “Construction is conservative”
– Adopts tried and trusted mainstream technologies
(eg: CAD, websites, email, project extranets)
– Often very cost-conscious
– Often very contractual
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• Face-to-face• Written word• Hand drawings• Telephone• Telegram• Telex• Fax• CAD• Email• Groupware (eg: Lotus Notes)• File transfer protocol (FTP)• Websites• Intranets, enterprise portals• Video- and tele-conferencing
• Extranets• Web-conferencing applications• File-sharing (P2P)• Instant messaging• Discussion forums• Home pages (iGoogle)• Wikis• Blogs• RSS• Social networking• Social search, tagging, sharing• Mashups: Mapping, time-lines, etc• Virtual worlds
Web 2.0
BIM
AEC and ICT
SaaS
Cloud computing
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Why Web 2.0 and the Built Environment?
• “Construction is information-intensive”
– “information overload”
– paper-intensive
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Why Web 2.0 and the Built Environment?
• “Construction is not collaborative”
– increasingly sophisticated at managing internal information …
– … but less good at sharing/re-using information with other project team members …
– … and/or with the ultimate owner/operator/occupier
– … and/or other stakeholders
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Why Web 2.0 and the Built Environment?
• “Construction is often adversarial”
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Why Web 2.0 and the Built Environment?
• “Construction is not very ‘green’”
– “… it is only in the last 10 years or so that the construction industry has really started to consider its environmental impacts.”
– Opportunities for ICT to help• ‘intelligent buildings’ (ie: IT-enabled BMS)• Modelling and assessment tools• performance indicators• automating manual processes (eg: CAD, logistics, tendering, etc)• improving communications• reducing travel, transport
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The concept for be2camp started as a Twitter conversation
between Martin Brown, fairsnape and Paul Wilkinson, BIW
following Martin's attendance at barcamp type events,
suggesting we do 'something' for the (UK) built
environment…This discussion was picked by Jodie Miners in Australia,
again through Twitter, and through conversations within
Second Life with Pam Broviak from Illinois, USA.
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Be2camp has been organised .. or unorganised … via
international Skype calls, Second Life meetings, blogs,
Google Groups, and via Twitter …. and … oh yes, with
hardly any emails.
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Be2camp 2008 happens today … but it is not just
about today … there will be other be2camps (UK,
Sydney, Illinois) … and most importantly the
be2camp site, we hope, will become a hub for built
environment web2.0 matters
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“We can’t solve problems by using the same kind of
thinking we used when we created them.”
sustainability manifesto
a
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Make sustainability in the built environment Open Source
Adopt the opportunities than Web 2.0 offers
This is an important issue for our sector and cannot be done
behind closed doors.
How…. ?
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Open communication
a sustainepedia – a wiki development site to allow real
consultation and collaboration,
Communication and dialogue through discussion
forums, blogs or twitter on progress.
Engage
Unless there is a truly open and representative approach
to sustainability, it will be largely ignored,
misunderstood or perceived as irrelevant to those at the
sharp end of the industry.
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Join in the movement, the transition, the debate -
help shape a sustainable built environment that
embraces web2.0
www.be2camp.com
www.be2camp.com
launching today ….
10.15 keynotes
11.00 coffee
11.30 workshop streams
13.00 lunch interval
13.45 Second Life
14.00 SL workshop and other stream(s)
15.30 coffee
16.00 final workshop streams
17.00 close - drinks
17.30 Pecha Kucha starts
19.30 Pecha Kucha finishes – adjourn to pub!
Web 2.0 and the Built Environment