Manufacturing construction: special report - the B1M
Guided by the value-we-can-create and the values-we-hold-to, we can constantly change the way we come together to find solutions to problems.
about the importance of data and analytics in the design and construction industry.A major aim of design, at least in my view, is to deliver an outcome that fulfils the client’s requirements in the best possible way.
It follows that if we can accumulate data about what our clients are seeking to achieve and analyse the data to generate insights to inform our design process, the better the result will be.. UNDERSTANDING COMPLEX PHARMACEUTICAL AND INDUSTRIAL PROCESSES.At Bryden Wood we have many industrial clients who are concerned with transforming raw materials into new products through complex processes.Our data analysts engage directly with clients to collect information about their processes and produce complex time-based models to simulate them and quantify the required inputs and resulting outputs..
This analytical work is diverse, ranging from a recent optimisation study for a pharmaceutical plant in Singapore, to a strategy for scaling up commercial supply of a new product, to investigating the likely production timescales for a future COVID-19 vaccine..Some might say that it is the role of the client to understand their process and of course that is correct.
However, a client is generally interested only in the process, its technical feasibility and ability to achieve their business needs.
We are interested in designing a built envelope that houses the process in the most efficient way.. DATA ANALYSIS INFORMS ENGINEERING AND DESIGN.Uranium is a very common metal, however, that is found all over the world.. Our energy challenge: achieving net zero by 2050.
The world is far off track when it comes to meeting the Paris Agreement goals of limiting the global temperature increase to 1.5˚C by 2050.. 2.Current projections, even those that include vast expansion of renewable energy generation, show that fossil fuels will still make up the majority of world energy use by the middle of this century.
This would result in a failure to adequately decarbonise, and put us on course for a high-risk 4˚C outcome, which could lead to substantial areas of the planet becoming uninhabitable.According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), in order to meet that limit of 1.5˚C, human-generated CO2 emissions must be cut in half by 2030 and reach net zero by 2050.