Monday, 31 August, 2009

Four Questions about Building Surveys

Why do I need CAD files for an existing building?

Surveyed drawings of buildings are very valuable. For any work or change in the building, access to accurate CAD files save time and money for everyone on your project team. If you can provide consultants with accurate data, they can do their job faster and minimize the risk of costly mistakes and changes.

If you are involved in leasing, you will have a competitive advantage if you can distribute accurate drawings of your available space. The leasing process will go much more smoothly if you can provide CAD files that let your prospective tenants quickly develop test-fit designs.

If rents are to be based on square foot rates, accurately measured drawings are required to calculate area, whether you are using the BOMA standard, or another building measurement standard.

For ongoing repair and maintenance, CAD files will reduce the guesswork for consultants and contractors. As a landlord, you will save money because you consultants will have to spend less time doing their own site verifications.

But if I already have CAD files from past projects, can't I just use those?

If you have a full set of CAD files for a recently finished building you may not need to survey anything. If the design team has been diligent in recording and documenting all the changes that occurred during the construction of the building then you may well have a perfect set of drawings.

Changes happen during construction for a variety of reasons. Updated drawings are not always properly distributed. It's a good idea to site verify a building to ensure that any drawings you may have correspond to the completed building.

In a multi-tenanted building changes are ongoing. Demising walls and corridors between suites are constantly updated. The drawings are done by many different consultants. After only a few years, the original drawings will be out of date and unreliable.

Older buildings will not have been designed using CAD in the first place and any subsequent files may be incomplete and of variable quality. Without verified overall dimensions you will have a patchwork of inconsistent data. A full building survey is very important for this type of building.

How do I know if a survey is accurate?

Surveying buildings can be tricky. The compound error of taking many small measurements adds up. If notes are done on paper and then entered in CAD, there is the risk of transcription errors. It is rare for two surveys to come to the exact same result. Even the BOMA standard allows for this problem. It is so difficult to get an accurate result that the BOMA standard - an ANSI (American National Standard Institute) standard- says you can have a difference of 2% between two surveys and both numbers are correct!

At Space Database we have worked out a method to dramatically reduce the possibility of errors and maximize accuracy. Through a combination of technical tools, software and our own ISO 9001 processes we are continually improving the accuracy of as-built drawings. Read more about our building measurement processes.

If the building continually changes, won't a survey be quickly out of date?

Keeping drawings up to date is a challenge. You need to establish a process to update your set of CAD files every time there is a physical change in the building. At Space Database we have developed Tru-Measure, an ISO 9001 software and service to keep your drawing files up-to-date. We use a ticketing system that integrates with your leasing activities. A network of service providers across North America keep your drawings and buildings synced. Find out more about how we keep your as-built drawings up to date!

Monday, 17 August, 2009

BOMA 96 Colour Coding

The BOMA 96 standard for calculating areas in office buildings can be confusing. The principle is logical: we gross up the usable area inside a suite to account for a proportionate share of the floor common area, and then we gross it up again to account for shared spaces common to all tenants throughout the building. But what does that look like on a set of floor-plans?

Over at the Space Database website we have provided a simple BOMA 96 Guide.

Virge-Kai Lindaja, our Customer Support manager and top trainer has recorded a short video to help explain how our drawings present the allocation of area.

For more Space Database videos, please visit our YouTube channel at http://www.youtube.com/spacedatabaseinc

Tuesday, 4 August, 2009

Email Marketing

We love our Blackberries! There’s so much they can do. It turns out that brokers love them too. Many commercial real estate brokers use them far more than they use desktops or laptops. To reach this vital audience, we need to deliver content in BlackBerry (and other smart-phone) format.

Space Database has developed marketing solutions that will deliver your listings directly to the tiny screen. There are several components:

  • Email marketing campaigns that display in both older and newer devices.
  • Links to drawings that look great on small and large screens.
  • Search functionality that lets you find just the right space.
  • Links to building websites designed for handheld display.
  • Functionality to let brokers and others forward new emails and listings to third parties.


Availability reports with built in search functions can be distributed as email campaigns.

These new Space Database handheld solutions provide you with several benefits:

  • Get your content into the hands of a large network of brokers.
  • Push content to the right people rather than waiting for them to search for you.
  • Brokers and others can easily forward listings and drawings to new prospects.
  • This system allows you to reach a large, targeted audience and to engage with prospective tenants much earlier in the decision making process.

Space Database can set up a small and affordable test campaign that will let you assess the response and engagement you can achieve with this type of advertising.

To find out more, please contact Greg Mounsey at gmounsey[at]spacedatabase.com or by phone at 877-516-8920 ext 236.

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