Sena, Rafael Oliveira; https://orcid.org/0009-0000-8454-4053; http://lattes.cnpq.br/2920189579566861
Resumo:
Poor maintenance of facades poses risks to building performance, as this system
serves as a protective interface with the surrounding environment. Therefore,
periodic preventive inspections and maintenance are necessary to prevent or correct
pathological manifestations at early stages. The lack of maintenance in Brazilian
public buildings is highly sensitive, reinforcing the need for solutions that add
efficiency to building management systems, which are characterized mainly by low
levels of digitalization. This study aims to propose guidelines for integrating visual
assets collected by drones in façade inspections with Building Information Modeling
(BIM) to support maintenance management in buildings with low digital maturity. The
research approach adopted is Design Science Research (DSR), following these
steps: 1) Problem awareness – drone inspection and interviews with managers of a
public university building to understand the current maintenance management
structure, and a systematic literature review to identify scientific gaps and deepen
theoretical foundations; 2) Artifact suggestion – inspection of façades of ten
institutional buildings and interviews with professionals from the institution’s
maintenance sector to identify existing anomalies and perceptions of the current
scenario of the maintenance department, as well as identification of requirements
and limitations of the photogrammetry process and analysis of anomalies; 3) Artifact
development – practical application of the method in one institutional building to
define protocols for handling visual assets and integrating anomaly information into
the building’s BIM model; 4) Artifact evaluation – through the constructs “perceived
ease of use,” “utility,” “impact potential,” and “transparency”; and 5) Conclusion –
analyzing the alignment of the artifact with the established context to formalize the
method. The main outputs were five protocols aimed at: 1) drone image acquisition
for maintenance purposes; 2) photogrammetric processing; 3) analysis of
informational requirements of the BIM model; 4) integration of orthomosaics into the
façade models; and 5) data integration and availability of inspection records. The
results evidenced the potential of the method for the institutional context, validated by
maintenance department professionals, and indicated clarity in executing the steps
and in making the results available, characterizing it as transparent and capable of
centralizing building information. The main limitations include dependence on
operational skills, which influence product quality, and the restriction of the method to
visual analyses due to the exclusive use of drones for data collection. Overall, the
findings indicate that the method constitutes a practical and replicable solution for
integrating visual assets into BIM, contributing to overcoming limitations reported in
the literature and supporting improvements in building maintenance management.