AltoQi BIM training
My experience with BIM training grew directly from professional practice at AltoQi, where I worked closely with BIM-based engineering workflows. Over time, it became clear that many recurring challenges were not caused by software limitations, but by how models were structured, interpreted, and relied upon as sources of engineering information. This was especially true when collaborating with multiple models in an open environment such as with IFC.
As part of my role, I delivered external training sessions focused on practical modelling workflows and data quality. Rather than emphasizing tools or commands, the sessions centered on how modeling decisions influence coordination, automation, and downstream engineering analyses. The goal was to help participants approach BIM as a structured engineering medium, not merely as representational.
Teaching these concepts proved valuable in clarifying assumptions, exposing common modelling pitfalls, and reinforcing the importance of semantic consistency—lessons that later informed my research on IFC-based engineering analysis.