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Sonata (building design software)

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Sonata was a 3D building design software application developed in the early 1980s and now regarded as the forerunner of today'sbuilding information modeling applications.[1][2]

Sonata was commercially released in 1986,[3] having been developed byJonathan Ingram independently and was sold to T2 Solutions (renamed fromGMW Computers in 1987[4] - which was eventually bought by Alias|Wavefront),[5] and was sold as a successor to GMW'sRUCAPS. It ran onworkstation computer hardware (by contrast, other 2Dcomputer-aided design (CAD) systems could run onpersonal computers). The system was not expensive, according to Michael Phiri.[6] Reiach Hall purchased "three Sonata workstations onSilicon Graphics machines, at a total cost of approximately £2000 each" [1990 prices]. Approximately 1,000 seats were sold between 1985 and 1992. However, as a BIM application, in addition to geometric modelling, it could model complete buildings, including complex parametrics, costs and staging of the construction process.[7]

Archicad founder Gábor Bojár has acknowledged that Sonata "was more advanced in 1986 than Archicad at that time", adding that it "surpassed already the matured definition of 'BIM' specified only about one and a half decade later".[8]

Many projects were designed and built using Sonata, includingPeddle Thorp Architect'sRod Laver Arena in 1987, andGatwick Airport North Terminal Domestic Facility byTaylor Woodrow.[9] The US-based architectHKS used the software in 1992 to design a horse racing facility (Lone Star Park inGrand Prairie,Texas) and subsequently purchased the successor product, Reflex.[10]

Target Australia Pty. Ltd. the Australian discount department store retailer bought two Sonata licences in 1992 to replace two RUCAPS workstations originally fromColes Supermarkets. The software was run on two Silicon GraphicsIRISIndigo workstations. Staff were trained to use the software including the parametric language. The simple but powerful parametrics enable productivity gains in documenting buildings and fixture layouts. Theobject-oriented system suited the standard components installed by the retailer. Combined with the multiple project access (MPA) networking on theUnixoperating system platform, a key selection criteria for continuing with the RUCAPS-Sonata architecture enabled the retailer's 50 stores in 5 years program during the late 1990s be executed with a small team. More workstations were purchased, including Silicon Graphics IRIS Indigo and Personal IRIS from theQueensland University of Technology. Year 2000 funding enabled the purchase of eight Silicon Graphics O2 workstations bringing the network to 11 workstations. The department continued to follow the development of Reflex and had contact with other users including Jeff Findlay atPeddle Thorp Architects. The business change to PTC and the direction away from building to a mechanical engineering system combined with Silicon Graphics move toIntelx86 architecture led Target to change to the most similar CAD software, Graphisoft’s Archicad.

The Sonata business was founded in 1984 and, by one account it "disappeared in a mysterious, corporate black hole, somewhere in eastern Canada in 1992,"[11] after new owner Alias Research discontinued marketing of the product.[12] Ingram then went on to developReflex, bought out by Parametric Technology Corporation (PTC) in 1996.[11]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Eastman, Chuck; Tiecholz, Paul; Sacks, Rafael; Liston, Kathleen (2008).BIM Handbook: a Guide to Building Information Modeling for owners, managers, designers, engineers, and contractors (1st ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley. pp. xi–xii.ISBN 9780470185285.
  2. ^Eastman, Chuck; Tiecholz, Paul; Sacks, Rafael; Liston, Kathleen (2011).BIM Handbook: A Guide to Building Information Modeling for Owners, Managers, Designers, Engineers and Contractors (2nd ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley. pp. 36–37.
  3. ^See, Richard (2007)."Building Information Models and Model Views"(PDF).Journal of Building Information Modelling. No. Fall. BuildingSmart Alliance. Retrieved17 October 2015.
  4. ^Port, Stanley (1989).The Management of CAD for Construction. New York: Springer.ISBN 9781468466058.
  5. ^Day, Martyn (September 2002)."Intelligent Architectural Modeling".AEC Magazine. Archived fromthe original on 19 April 2015. Retrieved15 June 2015.
  6. ^Phiri, Michael (1999).Information Technology in construction design. London: Thomas Telford Publishing. p. 181.ISBN 0-7277-2673-0.
  7. ^Morgan, L; Zampi, G (1999).Virtual Architecture. London: Batsford. p. 74.
  8. ^Ingram, Jonathan (2020). "Appendix 6: Letter to the Author".Understanding BIM: The Past, Present and Future. Abingdon: Routledge. p. 281.ISBN 978-0367244187.
  9. ^Fisher, Norman; Barlow, Richard (1997).Project Modelling in Construction: Seeing is believing. London: Thomas Telford Services Ltd. p. 74.
  10. ^McFarlane, Brian (31 March 2008)."How a major design firm adapted to a paradigm shift".Healthcare Design. Retrieved17 October 2015.
  11. ^abCrotty, Ray (2012).The Impact of Building Information Modelling: Transforming Construction. London: SPON/Routledge. p. 71.ISBN 9781136860560.
  12. ^Weisberg, David (2008),The Engineering Design Revolution: The People, Companies and Computer Systems That Changed Forever the Practice of Engineering. Chapter 16. AvailableonlineArchived 2015-09-29 at theWayback Machine. Retrieved: 17 October 2015
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