
4D BIM links your schedule to your model so the plan is visible, testable, and practical. Done well, it improves safety, delivery, and cash flow. Done poorly, it’s just a pretty video.
Build a usable 4D model
Organize model elements by work packages, zones, and floors. Map them to activities from P6 or MS Project. Keep IDs consistent so weekly updates don’t break links. Use location-based planning so your look-ahead plans follow the actual path of work.
Look-ahead plans that drive the week
Turn your 6-week and 3-week look-aheads into visualized sequences: access routes, laydown, crane positions, and MEP rough-in windows. Link spool drawing release dates to activities so prefab arrives just in time. Validate with the subs: if the animation looks clean but the foreman shakes their head, you’re not done.
Manage trade stacking before it hits the site
Stacking drywall, sprinkler, and electrical rough-in in the same zone kills productivity. Use 4D views to stagger trades by zone and level. Pair this with 3D clash services so the sequence reflects a clash-free state, no point scheduling work that still collides.
Measure what matters
- Planned vs. actual percent complete per zone.
- Crew flow stability (starts/stops = waste).
- Rework trend after coordination gates.
Close the loop with the field
Feed Revizto/issue IDs and daily reports back into the 4D model. When the field finds a deviation, update as built drawings and re-sequence. If a slab pour slides, the model shows downstream impacts like framing starts or above-ceiling inspections, so you reset the plan, not just the dates.
Bottom line: 4D BIM is a planning system, not a movie. Use it to align look-ahead plans, reduce trade stacking, and keep labor predictable.