The BIM manager should perform a formal compliance review against the BIM Execution Plan, model-content standard, information requirements, and applicable element or classification matrix. Each nonconforming condition should be documented clearly, including incorrect category assignments, inconsistent object styles, excessive geometric detail, missing parameters, invalid naming, and unsuitable data structures.
The subcontractor should then receive a controlled revision request identifying the required corrections and resubmission criteria. Geometry should be simplified to the level needed for coordination and downstream use, but required metadata, classifications, connection points, clearances, and asset information must be retained. Optimization and information compliance are parallel requirements, not competing alternatives.
Approving the model unchanged would introduce performance and data-quality defects into the federation and could cause unreliable clash results, scheduling errors, or handover deficiencies. Hiding excessive detail with view filters changes only its visibility; the underlying geometry and data remain noncompliant and continue to affect model processing. Instructing the subcontractor to reduce file size regardless of information loss also fails the project’s deliverable requirements.
Acceptance should occur only after the revised model passes the defined quality-control checks.
Reference topics: Content standards; subcontractor deliverables; model acceptance criteria; geometry optimization; classification and metadata; BEP compliance; quality-control reporting.