A 3D Laser Scanning and BIM-Based Workflow for Localization and Classification of MEP Pipe Installation Discrepancies
Sheng Bao, Xiaoran Zheng, Jun Huo, Xuanlue FangMechanical, electrical, and plumbing (MEP) pipe installation discrepancies can increase rework, complicate inspection, and affect subsequent operation and maintenance. This study presents a 3D laser scanning and Building Information Modeling (BIM)-based workflow for localizing and preliminarily classifying MEP pipe installation discrepancies in a building project. Preprocessed scanned pipe point clouds are registered with BIM-derived pipe point clouds through a coarse-to-fine Scan-BIM registration process. Individual pipe instances are extracted using distance-threshold-based growing, and scan-to-BIM pipe correspondence is established using nearest-neighbor root mean square error (RMSE). Pipes with relatively large overall RMSE values are further divided into slices to identify local high-discrepancy intervals. A slice-level discrepancy distribution function Rs, together with derivative-magnitude and derivative-fluctuation thresholds, is used to support preliminary Type 1/Type 2 interpretation of representative discrepancy patterns. In a student dormitory case, the workflow screened local pipes with relatively large discrepancies, localized maximum-RMSE regions, and distinguished representative connection-related discrepancies from overall offset or inclination cases. A threshold perturbation check showed consistent Type 1/Type 2 labels for the four representative cases within the tested range. The workflow provides case-study evidence for localized MEP pipe inspection, while broader validation across projects and pipe systems remains necessary.