Tally Study Material In Hindi Pdf

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Giordano Thibault

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Aug 4, 2024, 5:23:15 PM8/4/24
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The first part of the question is related to the difference in running Tally in a local copy of a central Revit model vs. running Tally in a detached model. It seems that the ideal would be to perform the analysis in the Central model, because the material mapping would not have to start from scratch if you did a second LCA study later in design after more changes had been made to the model. However, after watching some tutorials, the recommendation of some was to run Tally in a detached model to avoid compromising the central model. Can anyone confirm that they have experienced issues when running Tally in the central model?


A sort of follow up question to this is, can anyone provide insight on methods to keep the material mapping history stored in a central model? The goal here would be to make it such that anyone who opens a local copy of a central model that has previously had an Tally study done on it does not have to redo the material mapping process, and keeps the material mapping consistent with previous studies. In the few studies I have done so far, sometimes this works, and sometimes it does not, and I cannot figure out why.


Thanks for the thorough response! Your advice is very helpful, I appreciate it. I agree it makes sense to track the information outside of Tally as you go along in the process, but it would be great to be able to keep the mapping process saved - I will update this thread if I find out any more information about this.


As for the impact of changing material names, it does make sense to come up with a naming converntion for this. So the issue is more with altering the material names and the impact that this has on the coordination of the model? It does not necessarily cause any errors in Revit itself (ie an invalid material name or a material that is not recognized), but for a shared model or a model that would be linked to another, the materials would not line up?


For years, architects, engineers, and contractors have focused their efforts on reducing the amount of energy used to operate buildings. As buildings become more energy efficient, a larger percentage of the environmental impacts generated over the lifetime of a building comes from the manufacture, transportation, construction, and demolition of building materials. While many architects and engineers are aware of these embodied environmental impacts, few have the resources and expertise to be able to examine and compare the overall sustainability of different building material options. Tally answers this need for the design and building industry. To learn more or to request a free trial, visit choosetally.com.


Tally can summarize the environmental impacts of two different design options according to up to nine different categories. These results can then be broken down further by life cycle stage, Revit category, and Construction Specifications Institute (CSI) division.


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Huge video projection screens to ensure all the fans have a good view. Vendors serving thousands of beers, brats, and nachos. Giant restrooms capable of handling the influx of fans during breaks in the game. Massive parking lots big enough to handle the tailgating crowds, driving from near and far. And thousands of tons of materials to make the larger-than-life temples for sports fans.


The design team set a LEED Platinum certification goal and devised strategies to aggressively save energy and water, reduce waste during operations, and generate electricity from photovoltaic panels on site. Buro Happold's scope of work on the project included lighting design, structural analysis and general sustainability coordination.


In a presentation from Autodesk University 2014 called Flying High with Revit & Tally, Life Cycle Assessment for the Atlanta Falcons Stadium, Julie Janiski, a key sustainability core team member for the Atlanta Falcons project, described the team's approach to LEED certification. They worked under version 3, but also examined some of the more rigorous LEED v4 credits to raise the bar for for the project.


The structural system is massive, with 19 "megacolumns" requiring 100,000 cubic yards of concrete, and the fixed and operable roofs requiring over 16,000 tons of steel. The stadium's environmental footprint from materials alone would be enormous.


The team decided to test a new LEED v4 Materials and Resources credit called Building life cycle impact reduction that uses Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) to show reductions in the environmental impact of building materials relative to a baseline.


LEED has credits for reducing energy consumption during operations. To create a super energy efficient building, architects and energy experts need to collaborate throughout the design process. The new LCA-based credit is analogous to this, but looks at the environmental footprint associated with the extraction, manufacture, construction, and disposal of the building materials--also called "embodied" impacts. Architects and structural engineers need to work closely for this kind of analysis.


LCA can be broken down into steps: define the object of study (in this case, a stadium), create a life cycle inventory (a bill of materials, and the processes required to make them), and then link the inventory with environmental impact data (LCA experts across the globe aggregate this into databases).


The image below shows a life cycle inventory for an aluminum framed window. It's clear that the flows of materials and energy throughout a single product's life cycle is complex. At the scale of a whole building with hundreds of unique materials and products, this becomes overwhelming to most in the design and construction business.


"We did LCA on a number of projects, and every time we did it we found out we did something really dumb," says Roderick Bates, Senior Researcher at KieranTimberlake. Choosing systems that were good for disassembly but awful for the environment and "overinsultating the heck out of a house" were a couple examples where designers probably would have made different decisions if they had more information about their materials earlier.


Revit models are simplified representations of a building. Without requiring any new modeling practices, Tally automates the process of extracting material quantities from a Revit model and then a user fills in extra layers of detail to arrive at a realistic bill of materials for the project. Those quantities are linked to one of the best sources of environmental data: the thinkstep (formerly PE International) GaBi dataset.


Tally returns a report with the project data organized in various visual formats helpful for designers. Early studies helped Buro Happold understand concrete was the major source of materials-related impacts. From there, they ran different scenarios substituting fly ash for Portland cement to achieve the reduction thresholds required by LEED.


The stadium offers views to the downtown Atlanta cityscape via floor-to-ceiling windows. Designers studied the tradeoffs of different materials for the facade, choosing ETFE over glass since it reduced the amount of structural steel to support it.


In order to show improvement, you have to have something to compare it to. But for the new LCA-based LEED credits, there's no standardized approach to creating this hypothetical baseline. And without further detailed guidance from the USGBC, for now it's up to designers to decide what makes sense.


The Atlanta Falcons Stadium is an example of how a large design team--aided by BIM tools to help speed things along--can rally around a new sustainability challenge and learn a lot through the process.

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