AI should support the technical team

AI is most useful in BIM when it accelerates work that still has a clear technical owner. That includes script preparation, documentation support, parameter logic, checklist generation, report explanation, and workflow prototyping.

It is risky when teams treat AI as a substitute for model responsibility, design coordination, or professional review.

Good early use cases

The best early pilots are narrow, inspectable, and connected to existing BIM processes. For example: helping prepare pyRevit scripts, generating QA checklists, summarizing issue logs, or documenting a Power BI data model.

Each use case should define input data, expected output, review responsibility, and limits.

  • Script assistance for repetitive Revit tasks
  • Documentation of BIM standards and workflows
  • Preparing QA/QC checklists
  • Explaining dashboard logic
  • Supporting technical enablement content for teams

Governance makes AI practical

AI adoption in construction should be framed as controlled workflow improvement. The question is not whether AI is impressive; the question is whether it improves a process without weakening accountability.