1. Background
The specifiers that use NBS want to create a built environment that is safe and inclusive, and has sustainable outcomes. NBS helps specifiers meet this challenge through delivering standardised information and functionality that both improve productivity and reduce risk.
While specifiers need standardised digital information, construction manufacturers supply the systems and products that make up the built environment. Figure 1.1 below illustrates how NBS is an online digital platform, connecting thousands of specifiers with thousands of manufacturers that work together in the construction industry.
2. NBS and manufacturer information
At NBS, we have worked with construction
manufacturers since the 1970s to help them position their technical information
and services to specifiers. In 1973, the very first paper version of the
National Building Specification had leading manufacturers positioned against
each section. This was in the days before websites, emails or even faxes.
Since then, we have
worked with the RIBA to develop different manufacturer services, including RIBA
Product Selector, NBS Plus and also the NBS BIM Library .
These services have connected to the RIBA CPD
Providers Network to help with professional development. Figure 2.1 shows these
offerings – which work well individually but are admittedly somewhat
disconnected.
Listening to the feedback from our specifiers and our manufacturers, we have simplified and enhanced these offerings by combining them in a single platform. We have built NBS Source, currently available in the UK and launching into the Australian industry in April 2020.
Figure 2.2 shows that the NBS Source platform now combines RIBA Product Selector, NBS Plus and the NBS BIM Library in a single information platform that meets the content specifiers’ needs throughout the project timeline. This allows products to be discovered through case studies at the early stages of a project, then digital objects to be downloaded for the design, before the product is locked into the specification at the technical design stage. Associated information, such as installation and operation and maintenance manuals may then be accessed at the construction and in-use phase of a project.
Figure 2.3 illustrates why manufacturers need to be in NBS Source. The main reason is the growing demand for well-structured digital information from specifiers. The days of relying on trade shows and printed catalogues – that are out of date on the day they get printed – have gone. Specifiers demand well-structured technical information that is current, and clearly shows that performance criteria have been verified.
An increased, more targeted exposure is possible using digital means. Traditional advertising uses a scattergun approach. With NBS Source, exposure is given to manufacturer products at the point when they are being specified. Currently, over 4000 architectural and engineering practices across the UK use NBS for their specifications. By working with NBS, manufacturers can be seen by decision makers on the biggest construction projects. Furthermore, because all these specification decisions are being captured in the cloud, this intelligence can be aggregated and then delivered back as real insight to the manufacturer.
3. NBS Source
We believe that NBS Source drives a new future for manufacturer product information. The richness and the well-structured data are what make Source different. The team at NBS is aligning every manufacturer’s product with the structure of the equivalent specification clause in NBS Chorus.
Chorus is the online specification platform from NBS that ‘mirrors’ Source. Figure 3.1 shows the generic specification clause for a hand dryer in Chorus. Our team of technical authors creates each of the specification properties by researching the relevant standards and industry publications. At NBS, we have over 7000 of these clauses, representing the systems and products that are used in our built environment.
Figure 3.2 shows how this information structure is used in Source. When performing a search, it is easy to define criteria to ensure that the products identified meet these requirements. For example, when searching for a hand dryer, a requirement may be that it dries hands in less than 12 seconds and has a noise level of less than 70 dB at 1 m. Equally, when searching for a timber section, a requirement may be that it has a strength class of D60 and an FSC certificate.
Being able to filter many possible products from many different manufacturers to only the products that meet your specification is NBS specifiers’ most requested function in our focus groups and surveys. Furthermore, once a selection of products has been filtered, the specifier needs to be able to compare these products. Figure 3.3 shows how products of the same category can be easily compared.
Clearly, the declared performance of the product is essential. But this is not the only important piece of information. Our specifiers have told us that other information is essential to improve the way that the industry works. Examples of this are illustrated in Figure 3.4:
- Imagery showing technical information and in situ visualisations.
- Availability and currency of information.
- Short hyperlinks, that permanently link to the Source product page or the Chorus project specification, which can be used in the 3D model and attached to the physical product.
- Evidence of third-party certification from leading schemes, from organisations such as ABCB Codemark, Watermark and Green Star.
- Application guidance to help specifiers understand which systems from, and in what context, a product is to be used.
- Integration with NBS Chorus to indicate which previous projects the product has been specified in.
- Digital objects that can be downloaded and used in design models.
We have developed a
manufacturer partner platform that will make it easy to capture and maintain
this data. Figure 3.5 shows the data management interface, where product
information can be captured or uploaded. Further work is continuing in this
area to look at streaming content from a manufacturer’s digital Product
Information Management system to create further efficiencies. NBS is also
monitoring the latest standards on digital information exchange and building
our systems to allow for interoperability.
Finally, NBS Source will allow manufacturers to tell their success stories through engaging case studies. Figure 3.6 shows how a manufacturer can present their products through the successful outcomes of the buildings that they were specified for and installed in. In the example below, several floor-covering products have been used in a hotel to help create a building that has delighted the client. Within NBS Source, the detailed technical information about products is linked to associated information such as case studies, certification and manuals.
Over recent years at NBS, we have recognised that
the industry demands well-structured digital information and the connected
platforms to utilise them when specifying. We believe that our two
collaborative platforms, NBS Chorus for specification and NBS Source for
manufacturer product information will fundamentally enhance the way that the
industry works.
Manufacturers may contact us for further information on Source at:
https://www.thenbs.com.au/nbs-source