What Is BIM? Revit, Coordination and Technical Delivery
A guide to why BIM, Revit modeling, discipline coordination and technical documentation matter in architectural projects.

BIM is a working method that connects geometry, information and coordination. In architecture, it helps teams understand the project as a living model rather than a set of disconnected drawings.
Revit supports coordinated decisions
Model-based work makes plans, sections, elevations and schedules more consistent. When the model changes, related documents can be updated with fewer coordination gaps.
BIM reduces hidden conflicts
Architectural, structural and MEP decisions often overlap. A coordinated model helps identify conflicts early, before they become expensive site problems.
Documentation becomes clearer
Good BIM work supports drawing sets, details, quantities and revision control. The value is not the software itself, but the discipline it brings to the project process.
What to define in a BIM workflow
Model level, coordination rules, drawing standards, file exchange and revision tracking should be defined early. Software alone does not guarantee quality; clean modeling habits and regular checks create the value.