Centre for Digital Built Britain
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Centre for Digital Built Britain (CDBB) was a partnership between the University of Cambridge and UK's Department for Business, Energy and Industry Strategy. The CDBB was established in 2017 to support the transformation of the UK built environment using digital technologies to better design, build, maintain and integrate assets. Prior to its closure in March 2022, it was the home of the UK BIM programme, begun by the UK BIM Task Group (2011-2017), and the National Digital Twin programme.
In May 2011, UK Government Chief Construction Adviser Paul Morrell called for adoption of Building Information Modelling (BIM) on UK government construction projects.[1] The UK BIM Task Group was a UK Government-funded group, managed through the Cabinet Office, and created in 2011. Chaired by Mark Bew, it was founded to "drive adoption of BIM across government" in support of the Government Construction Strategy.[2] It led the government's BIM programme and requirements,[3] including a free-to-use set of UK standards and tools that defined 'level 2 BIM'.[4] The BIM Task Group later took responsibility for delivering the Digital Built Britain strategy,[5][6][7] published in February 2015.[8][9]
The work of the BIM Task Group continued under the stewardship of the Cambridge-based Centre for Digital Built Britain,[10] announced by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills in December 2017 and formally launched in early 2018. Its role was to support the transformation of the UK's construction sector using digital technologies to better plan, build, maintain and use infrastructure.[11]
In October 2019, the CDBB, the UK BIM Alliance (renamed 'nima' in 2022[12]) and the BSI Group launched the UK BIM Framework. Superseding the BIM levels approach, the framework describes an overarching approach to implementing BIM in the UK, integrating the international ISO 19650 series of standards into UK processes and practice.[13]
In March 2022, the CDBB completed its mission,[14] passing the Digital Twin Hub, International Programme, and Climate Resilience Demonstrator to the Connected Places Catapult. The final research projects within the Construction Innovation Hub Programme will complete by September 2022.