AIA, Autodesk automate reporting 2030 Commitment performance data

by Brianna Crandall — June 6, 2016 — The American Institute of Architects (AIA) has announced the release of a new feature — developed in collaboration with Autodesk — that will automate the AIA 2030 Commitment performance data reporting from energy analysis software directly to the Design Data Exchange (DDx). This collaboration has resulted in an open Automated Program Interface (API) to the DDx, available to any energy modeling software vendor, reducing the duplication of effort using the existing process, says AIA.

The new automated connection will allow the more than 350 AIA 2030 committed firms to report their project and portfolio performance data to the DDx directly from Autodesk Insight 360, a technology addition included in Autodesk Revit and Autodesk FormIt 360 Pro subscriptions.

This automated process between Insight 360 and DDx will eliminate the need for manual data entry and eliminates duplication of effort encouraging performance data analysis and more frequent reporting throughout the design process instead of annually, explains AIA. The DDx interface is open source with the ability to connect with other energy modeling software providers. Additional vendors are welcome to link up with the DDx system, adds the organization.

Eliminating the overhead of manual reporting not only saves time but also enables more regular updates so firms can get up-to-the-minute progress on their projects and portfolio. In terms of actually meeting the targets themselves, one of the key findings of the 2014 Progress Report was the critical role that energy modeling plays, and how projects that applied energy modeling were generally higher performing.

For example, of the projects submitted in the 2014 reporting period, nearly 50 percent of the projects where an energy model was created met or came close to achieving the AIA 2030 Commitment goals, whereas 80 percent of non-model projects fell below the 40 percent target. This offering helps to lower the barriers to energy modeling, making it possible to conduct energy modeling on virtually every project, especially from the early stages, but in doing so automatic reporting to DDx is essentially free, points out AIA.