u/Cheap-Arm-3716

▲ 0 r/bim

BIM Engineers are in demand in 2026 because construction companies can’t afford costly site errors anymore.

From clash detection to 4D scheduling and digital twins, BIM is helping projects save time, reduce rework, and improve coordination between teams. Even mid-sized projects now expect BIM workflows as a standard.

A few years ago BIM was considered a “good skill to have.”
Now it’s becoming a baseline requirement in the AEC industry. ()

reddit.com
u/Cheap-Arm-3716 — 16 days ago
▲ 0 r/bim

Noticed this on a recent site — we had a coordination issue between HVAC and structural. Normally it would’ve been caught on-site (and cost time + money), but BIM flagged it early during clash detection.

That kinda hit me… this isn’t just “nice to have” anymore.

Feels like BIM is becoming the default way projects run.

Are you guys seeing the same on your projects?

reddit.com
u/Cheap-Arm-3716 — 18 days ago