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Users can directly communicate, while having a full context of how a part of a project should or shouldn’t be constructed or why a certain design solution is not going to be practical,” he explains. “As more and more people begin to cooperate on the collaborative platform, things like constructability, which has not traditionally been part of the 3D review process, can now be accessed on a device such as an iPad. A safety manager could just walk through what is supposed to be a project site and look for any safety breaches,” he adds.Ī key feature with Revizto’s BIM platform, Milicevic says, is how it allows all project stakeholders to deploy BIM methodologies and technologies, regardless of whether they are in the head office, site office or out on site. This capability expands not only to coordination works, but also to safety reviews. Users can put on virtual reality goggles and submit their reviews that way. Anybody can pick it up and use it on different platforms, not just with laptops and desktops, but even iPads and tablets,” says Milicevic.

“Because of the way Revizto is built on a gaming engine, it provides users with an extremely simple experience. Using cloud optimisation means the models can be accessed from any device without demanding sophisticated hardware or training. To solve this issue, Revizto uses a gaming engine to create an immersive model for all project stakeholders, from designers to safety officers, to visualise the project in real-time and coordinate with each other. The user-friendliness of their existing platforms wouldn’t be as good either.” “Before Revizto, there wasn’t a collaborative tool in the market which could truly support the volume, complexity and size of such models – meaning that people in that space would require an internet connection that could often be interrupted by poor connectivity issues and lag. “Linear infrastructure projects consist of a lot of models which are very large and stretched out,” he says. What makes Revizto’s platform a “game-changer,” Milicevic notes, is how it can handle large and complex infrastructure models while remaining user-friendly. Using gaming technology and cloud solutions, Revizto brings together various BIM and CAD data to track all project issues in one centralised 3D environment.
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It is through such demonstrated success that Revizto, an integrated BIM collaboration software platform introduced globally in 2014, has gained its foothold in Australia and been growing its impact on the construction sector.

“In fact, some large rail and road projects where big engineering companies have adopted Revizto’s BIM software have been tracking so well with their reviews that the government officials were prompted to go in and see what the contractors were doing that resulted in such efficiencies.” “We have seen significant success with the use of BIM in the infrastructure space over the past three to four years,” he tells Roads & Infrastructure. The use of Building Information Modelling (BIM) for managing large transport infrastructure projects is growing rapidly, and as Vlad Milicevic, Director of APAC region at Revizto sees it, there is a strong case for increased adoption of BIM tools across the industry. With infrastructure projects growing in size and complexity, Vlad Milicevic, Director of APAC region at Revizto, says the industry has never been better positioned to embrace the benefits of digital engineering.

Vlad Milicevic, Director of APAC region, Revizto.
