Sonata (building design software)

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Sonata was a 3D building design software application developed in the early 1980s and now regarded as the forerunner of today's building information modelling applications.[1][2]

Sonata was commercially released in 1986,[3] having been developed by Jonathan Ingram independently and was sold to T2 Solutions (renamed from GMW Computers in 1987[4] - which was eventually bought by Alias|Wavefront),[5] and was sold as a successor to GMW's RUCAPS. It ran on workstation computer hardware (by contrast, other 2D CAD systems could run on personal computers). The system was not expensive, according to Michael Phiri.[6] Reiach Hall purchased "three Sonata workstations on Silicon Graphics machines, at a total cost of approximately £2000 each" [1990 prices]. Approximately 1000 seats were sold between 1985 and 1992. However, as a BIM application, in addition to geometric modelling, it could model complete buildings, including complex parametrics, costs and staging of the construction process.[7]

A large number of projects were designed and built using Sonata including Peddle Thorp Architect's Rod Laver Arena in 1987, and Gatwick Airport North Terminal Domestic Facility by Taylor Woodrow.[8] The US-based architect HKS used the software in 1992 to design a horse racing facility (Lone Star Park in Grand Prairie, Texas) and subsequently purchased the successor product, Reflex.[9]

The Sonata business was founded in 1986 and, by one account it "disappeared in a mysterious, corporate black hole, somewhere in eastern Canada in 1992,"[10] after new owner Alias Research discontinued marketing of the product.[11] Ingram then went on to develop Reflex, bought out by Parametric Technology Corporation (PTC) in 1996.[10]

References

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  11. Weisberg, David (2008), The Engineering Design Revolution: The People, Companies and Computer Systems That Changed Forever the Practice of Engineering. Chapter 16. Available online. Retrieved: 17 October 2015


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