Scan to BIM · BIM/VDC · Equipment Coordination · Digital Twin

Michigan MRF: Lifecycle BIM Coordination from Concept to Commissioning

Michigan MRF

Color-coded Revit model showing equipment systems and facility layout — Detroit MRF

Industry
MRF · Recycling
Location
Detroit, Michigan
Scope
Scan to BIM · BIM/VDC · Equipment Coordination · Digital Twin
DELIVERY
CDE setup → Equipment layout → Clash detection → Sequenced installation → Closeout
CLIENT
Fortune 500 Waste Management Leader
Overview

The Project

A state-of-the-art materials recovery facility in Detroit required full lifecycle BIM coordination: from initial equipment layout through installation and commissioning. The project involved multiple vendors, fabricators, and field crews working in parallel across a complex facility with new sorting equipment, conveyor systems, structural platforms, and utility infrastructure. OAR served as the BIM coordination lead throughout, connecting all project stakeholders through a Common Data Environment and managing the digital thread from design through closeout.

The Challenge

Multiple vendors. One facility. Zero room for field conflicts.

Coordinating a large MRF equipment installation requires synchronizing designers, equipment suppliers, fabricators, and field crews who are rarely working from the same information at the same time. Facility drawings were either outdated or unavailable for certain areas, and the equipment supplier needed verified existing conditions before committing to fabrication tolerances. Without a central coordination environment, conflicts between new equipment and existing structure would surface during installation — when fixing them is most expensive. The project timeline left no room for change orders, RFIs, or shutdown extensions.

Our Approach

One model. All stakeholders. Every phase.

01

Common Data Environment & Existing Conditions

CDE setup · LiDAR scan · Revit LOD 300

OAR established a Common Data Environment connecting the design team, WM site team, equipment vendors, fabricators, and field contractors into a single shared platform. Concurrent with CDE setup, OAR performed a full LiDAR scan of the facility and delivered a verified Revit model of existing conditions — giving every stakeholder a single, accurate starting point for design and coordination work. 

02

Equipment Layout, Clash Detection & Quantity Takeoffs

Navisworks · Autodesk Construction Cloud · Multi-trade coordination

All equipment components — sorting systems, conveyors, structural platforms, fire suppression, lighting, and egress — were placed and evaluated within the coordinated 3D model. OAR ran programmatic clash detection across all systems and managed issue resolution through ACC, tracking every conflict from identification through approval. Quantity takeoffs derived directly from the model supported pre-bid procurement, improving bid accuracy before fabrication began.

03

Fabrication Drawings, Time-Sequenced Install & Field Support

Navisworks Timeliner · Fabrication drawings · AR field verification

OAR produced fabrication and installation drawings derived from the coordinated model, ensuring field crews and fabricators worked from a single verified source. A time-sequenced installation simulation mapped weekly milestones for all vendors and trades, reducing crew downtime and defining task dependencies before mobilization. During installation, BIM models extended into the field through AR overlays, enabling real-time verification and immediate communication of field conditions back to the project team. At closeout, OAR delivered a comprehensive digital package including LOTO maps, safety plans, and emergency layouts.

What We Delivered

On schedule. Zero field conflicts. Fully documented.

The Detroit MRF installation was executed on schedule with no field conflicts requiring unplanned design changes. Every clash had been identified and resolved in the digital environment before fabrication began — the installation crew worked from coordinated models with a clear sequence and no surprises. At project closeout, the facility team received a complete digital twin: a color-coded, equipment-accurate Revit model reflecting the as-installed state of the facility, along with full closeout documentation for ongoing operations and future retrofits.

What the client received

Existing conditions Revit model (LOD 300) from full LiDAR scan

Quantity takeoffs from model for pre-bid procurement support

Coordinated multi-trade BIM model — equipment, structure, MEP, fire suppression, and utilities

Fabrication and installation drawings derived from coordinated model

Clash detection reports with full issue log tracked in Autodesk Construction Cloud

Clash detection reports with full issue log tracked in Autodesk Construction Cloud

As-installed digital twin with color-coded equipment models

Closeout documentation package — LOTO maps, safety plans, emergency layouts

Project Gallery
Related projects

Life Sciences Campus Renovation: 350 Clashes Resolved Before Mobilization — $450K in Avoided Rework 

Midwest MRF Documentation: LOD 300 As-Built Model of a 100,000 SF Active Recycling Facility 

Michigan MRF: Lifecycle BIM Coordination from Concept to Commissioning 

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