Comparative Study of Building Information Modeling–Impacted Provisions in the Standard Forms of Construction Contracts

Building information modeling (BIM) has been operating in Malaysia for over 10 years with various anticipations and strong governmental support. However, the acceptance and application of BIM remain slow and below the targeted goal. Until recently, many construction players continued to face various...

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Published in:Journal of Legal Affairs and Dispute Resolution in Engineering and Construction
Main Author: Alwee S.N.A.S.; Judi S.S.; Zolkafli U.K.; Salleh H.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) 2025
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85216079857&doi=10.1061%2fJLADAH.LADR-1180&partnerID=40&md5=bf05c896fac1712c7afa58c2e9c92943
id 2-s2.0-85216079857
spelling 2-s2.0-85216079857
Alwee S.N.A.S.; Judi S.S.; Zolkafli U.K.; Salleh H.
Comparative Study of Building Information Modeling–Impacted Provisions in the Standard Forms of Construction Contracts
2025
Journal of Legal Affairs and Dispute Resolution in Engineering and Construction
17
2
10.1061/JLADAH.LADR-1180
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85216079857&doi=10.1061%2fJLADAH.LADR-1180&partnerID=40&md5=bf05c896fac1712c7afa58c2e9c92943
Building information modeling (BIM) has been operating in Malaysia for over 10 years with various anticipations and strong governmental support. However, the acceptance and application of BIM remain slow and below the targeted goal. Until recently, many construction players continued to face various challenges and difficulties when implementing BIM, particularly in the contractual and procurement aspects of the implementation. The Malaysian standard forms of contract still lack contractual conditions related to the incorporation of BIM provisions to support BIM uses in the current contractual setting. Therefore, this study examined and compared the available provisions in the local standard forms of contract with BIM provisions from overseas practice to identify some of the affected contract conditions on BIM processes. A literature study on the current implementation of BIM and its importance to construction contracts, including the seven local standard forms of contract and seven overseas BIM contracts and protocols, was performed as a data collection exercise. The content analysis derived four key themes encompassing 20 contract provisions that could be improvised according to the purpose of BIM-based projects. The four themes are (1) new BIM roles and responsibilities, (2) coordination process that aligned with contract administration, (3) BIM-based contract documentation, and (4) rightness to claim loss and/or expenses arising from BIM implementation. The findings were then validated by five experts to ascertain the applicability of the proposed BIM-impacted provisions for the local context. This research concluded that most of the existing local standard forms do not incorporate BIM contractual conditions in safeguarding the correct allocation of risks throughout the BIM project life cycle. It was recommended that the current context of construction contracts considering best practices from the overseas guidelines and incorporating digital and technological considerations should be conceptualized, increasing the effectiveness of BIM in the Malaysian construction industry. © 2025 American Society of Civil Engineers.
American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE)
19434162
English
Article

author Alwee S.N.A.S.; Judi S.S.; Zolkafli U.K.; Salleh H.
spellingShingle Alwee S.N.A.S.; Judi S.S.; Zolkafli U.K.; Salleh H.
Comparative Study of Building Information Modeling–Impacted Provisions in the Standard Forms of Construction Contracts
author_facet Alwee S.N.A.S.; Judi S.S.; Zolkafli U.K.; Salleh H.
author_sort Alwee S.N.A.S.; Judi S.S.; Zolkafli U.K.; Salleh H.
title Comparative Study of Building Information Modeling–Impacted Provisions in the Standard Forms of Construction Contracts
title_short Comparative Study of Building Information Modeling–Impacted Provisions in the Standard Forms of Construction Contracts
title_full Comparative Study of Building Information Modeling–Impacted Provisions in the Standard Forms of Construction Contracts
title_fullStr Comparative Study of Building Information Modeling–Impacted Provisions in the Standard Forms of Construction Contracts
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Study of Building Information Modeling–Impacted Provisions in the Standard Forms of Construction Contracts
title_sort Comparative Study of Building Information Modeling–Impacted Provisions in the Standard Forms of Construction Contracts
publishDate 2025
container_title Journal of Legal Affairs and Dispute Resolution in Engineering and Construction
container_volume 17
container_issue 2
doi_str_mv 10.1061/JLADAH.LADR-1180
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85216079857&doi=10.1061%2fJLADAH.LADR-1180&partnerID=40&md5=bf05c896fac1712c7afa58c2e9c92943
description Building information modeling (BIM) has been operating in Malaysia for over 10 years with various anticipations and strong governmental support. However, the acceptance and application of BIM remain slow and below the targeted goal. Until recently, many construction players continued to face various challenges and difficulties when implementing BIM, particularly in the contractual and procurement aspects of the implementation. The Malaysian standard forms of contract still lack contractual conditions related to the incorporation of BIM provisions to support BIM uses in the current contractual setting. Therefore, this study examined and compared the available provisions in the local standard forms of contract with BIM provisions from overseas practice to identify some of the affected contract conditions on BIM processes. A literature study on the current implementation of BIM and its importance to construction contracts, including the seven local standard forms of contract and seven overseas BIM contracts and protocols, was performed as a data collection exercise. The content analysis derived four key themes encompassing 20 contract provisions that could be improvised according to the purpose of BIM-based projects. The four themes are (1) new BIM roles and responsibilities, (2) coordination process that aligned with contract administration, (3) BIM-based contract documentation, and (4) rightness to claim loss and/or expenses arising from BIM implementation. The findings were then validated by five experts to ascertain the applicability of the proposed BIM-impacted provisions for the local context. This research concluded that most of the existing local standard forms do not incorporate BIM contractual conditions in safeguarding the correct allocation of risks throughout the BIM project life cycle. It was recommended that the current context of construction contracts considering best practices from the overseas guidelines and incorporating digital and technological considerations should be conceptualized, increasing the effectiveness of BIM in the Malaysian construction industry. © 2025 American Society of Civil Engineers.
publisher American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE)
issn 19434162
language English
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