Most HBIM methodologies and tools were developed for European heritage contexts — Gothic cathedrals, Renaissance palaces, Georgian terraces. The parametric libraries, classification systems, and modelling conventions reflect Western architectural typologies and construction techniques.
When these tools are applied to Islamic, South Asian, East Asian, or vernacular African architecture, significant gaps emerge:
Geometric challenges:
- Muqarnas (stalactite vaulting) involves thousands of small, precisely shaped elements in three-dimensional compositions that defy standard BIM classification
- Islamic geometric patterns require parametric definitions that most BIM libraries don't include
- Irregular vernacular construction — rammed earth, adobe, timber frame with infill — doesn't map to industrialised building component categories
- Curved and organic forms — domes, iwans, hypostyle halls — challenge the rectilinear assumptions built into most BIM software
Classification challenges:
- Standard construction classification systems (Uniclass, OmniClass, MasterFormat) don't include categories for wind towers, mashrabiya, jali screens, or muqarnas
- The semantic relationships between elements differ — a mashrabiya is simultaneously structure, enclosure, environmental control, and ornament; Western BIM categories treat these as separate systems
- Material descriptions assume industrialised building products, not handcrafted lime plaster, carved stucco, or hand-painted ceramic tiles