Building Innovation: Who’s the 2024 Exceptional Woman in Building?
Join the National Institute of Building Sciences in Washington, DC, as we uncover current state challenges and discover opportunities to improve capital project delivery in the digital age. The in-person workshop, with lead facilitation provided by our BIM Council leadership and distinguished partners, will bring together a maximum of 50 hand-selected AECO stakeholders to participate on focused teams. Prior to the workshop, invited participants are asked to join live or watch the recording of a 90-minute webinar and panel discussion covering industry standards and certifications that will drive the team discussions. Participants will represent their design, construction, owner, or IT solution partner stakeholder bias during team breakout sessions that will be structured to help identify key areas of impact for each stakeholder group relative to information privacy and cyber security requirements. Following the breakouts, each team will report the opportunities identified to the larger group for discussion and further validation. To close the session, all validated opportunities will be shared with the National BIM Program Steering Committee to review and recommend future actions by the National BIM Program. An education session will be held at Building Innovation 2022 September 26-28 in Washington, DC, to discuss the findings from the webinar and workshop.
As a result of participation in this session, attendees will be able to:
10-10:20am |
Welcome and Sponsorship Thank You |
10:20-10:30am |
Workshop Intro |
10:30-11am |
Panel Discussion |
11am-12:30pm |
Breakout Sessions |
12:30-1pm |
Lunch Break |
1pm-2pm |
Breakout Sessions |
2-3pm |
Group Discussion |
3-4pm |
Summarization and Discussion of What's Next |
To ensure we have a collaborative and constructive discussion, the following rules will apply to each part of the series without exception:
An invite-only event
Event Location: American Institute of Architects Headquarters, 1735 New York Ave NW, Washington, DC 20006
Airports: Ronald Reagan Washington Airport (DCA) 4.1 miles; Baltimore/Washington International Airport (BWI) 35 miles; Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD) 26 miles
Hotels: AKA White House .4mi; Hampton Inn .4mi; Courtyard by Marriott .3mi; State Plaza Hotel .4mi; Hilton Garden Inn .9mi; The Hay Adams Hotel .5mi; The St. Regis Hotel .6mi; The Capitol Hilton .6mi
Metro: Farragut West Station (Blue, Orange, and Silver Lines) .4 miles
Parking: Metered Street Parking; Colonial Parking Garage-1800 G Street NW (closes at 5PM)
Digital Built Week (DBW) Americas is an annual event, designed to cater to the needs of those who design, build, operate and maintain our built environment. As a community of professionals, it is dedicated to improving the way industry works together. DBW encompasses a whole host of events, including BILT, BCS, Data Day and DTS.
Virtual MeetingThe architecture and design event of the year returns to Chicago. With the city as our backdrop, we’ll explore architecture’s ability to drive new thinking in one of the most design-forward, sustainable cities in the U.S. Welcome back.
Chicago, ILCross Laminated Timber (CLT) Shear Wall Design Example
Seismic force resisting systems based on Cross Laminated Timber (CLT) shear walls have garnered considerable attention for use in building structures around the world for many years with standardization as a seismic force resisting system happening in the U.S. for the first time with inclusion of seismic design requirements in 2021 Special Design Provisions for Wind and Seismic (SDPWS) and in ASCE 7-22 Minimum Design Loads and Associated Criteria for Buildings and Other Structures. This presentation summarizes the CLT shear wall design example contained in the 2020 NEHRP Provisions: Design Examples, provides background on the new system, and illustrates application of the CLT shear wall system design requirements through a design example.
Learning Objectives: Participant will:
Resilience-Based Design and the NEHRP Provisions
This talk presents the new concepts of resilience and functional recovery as they relate to earthquake design. Referencing Resource Paper 1 of the 2020 NEHRP Provisions, it looks ahead to how building codes and design standards might begin to incorporate functional recovery time as an explicit measure of performance and basis for design. The ideas are illustrated by hypothetical application to the CLT Shear Wall design example.
The Ventilation 2022: 13th International Industrial Ventilation Conference for Contaminant Control will immediately precede the 2022 ASHRAE Annual Conference at the same location, June 22-24.
Toronto, ON, CanadaMeet with leading capital project professionals and industry experts who are discovering solutions to standardization and design problems. Learn networking strategies for advancing your career. Recognize innovative individuals and companies that will receive prestigious awards.
Cleveland, OHComposite Plate Shear Wall / Concrete Filled (C-PSW/CF), also known as the SpeedCore system, is an efficient seismic force-resisting system for buildings. Two types of C-PSW/CF systems are possible: coupled and uncoupled. Seismic design requirements for uncoupled C-PSW/CF systems were addressed in ASCE/SEI 7-16 and AISC 341-16, Section H7. Coupled C-PSW/CF systems are more ductile and have more redundancy than uncoupled systems, but ASCE/SEI 7-16 did not assign seismic design factors in Table 12.2-1. A FEMA P695 study was conducted to verify the design factors that should be used for such Coupled C-PSW/CF structures. Adding this as a separate category in Table 12.2-1 was important because they can be used as the elevator core wall systems in modern high-rise buildings. Two line items featuring this system are now added to ASCE/SEI 7-22 Table 12.2-1 under Building Frame Systems and Dual Systems with Special Moment Frames. R = 8, Cd = 5.5, and ?0 = 2.5 are the design factors in both line items. The height limits are the same as for corresponding uncoupled isolated wall systems.
A definition for the Coupled C-PSW/SF system and its design and detailing requirements were not included in AISC 360-16 or AISC 341-16. A new Section H8 in AISC 341-22 includes specific provisions for the definition and use of this Coupled C-PSW/CF system, including details on the capacity design principle limits on applicability. This presentation outlines the above developments and presents a detailed design example illustrating the Coupled-C-PSW/CF seismic force-resisting system.
Learning objectives:
This session of the Infrastructure 2022 series will focus on clean water, electrical grid and powerline resiliency, and closing the digital divide as it pertains to the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA).
According to the Environmental Protection Agency, there are an estimated six to 10 million lead service lines across the country. Cities have been taking measures to finance projects that identify and remove the bad lines, but it hasn’t been enough. The U.S. is ranked 26th in the world for safe drinking water and sanitation by the Environmental Performance Index. Knowing that access to clean drinking water is a basic human right, the IIJA allocated $55 billion to further reach this goal.
In January 2022, the U.S. Department of Energy launched the Building a Better Grid Initiative to make the nation’s power grid more resilient to the impacts of climate change and increase access to reliable and affordable clean energy. The IIJA earmarked $28 billion for resiliency of powerlines and over $60 billion total for clean energy.
Closing the digital divide is more important than ever in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Americans need access to high-speed internet for work, study, and play. Lack of access to broadband infrastructure has become an equality issue in the U.S. The IIJA will work to combat this by delivering more than $60 billion in funds to expand access to high-speed networks throughout the nation.
Virtual MeetingWhether you are a code official, architect, engineer, contractor, PMG or fire safety professional, your participation is vital in helping to develop model codes and standards used in the design, build and compliance process to construct safe, sustainable, affordable and resilient structures.
Louisville, KYThe Sheet Metal and Air Conditioning Contractors’ National Association (SMACNA) is an international trade association representing 1,834 member firms in 97 chapters throughout the United States, Canada, Australia, and Brazil. A leader in promoting quality and excellence in the sheet metal and air conditioning industry, SMACNA has offices in Chantilly, VA., which is outside of Washington, D.C., and on Capitol Hill.
Colorado Springs, CO