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Online-Umfrage zur BIM-Integration in der öffentlichen Auftragsvergabe in der EU

Are you involved in public procurement or BIM adoption in Europe? Your experience and insights are crucial to shaping the future of digital and sustainable public procurement across the EU.

There is an EU-wide survey to understand how Building Information Modelling (BIM) is currently being integrated into public procurement — and your inputis needed.

Why should you participate?

BIM is a powerful tool to drive innovation, sustainability, and efficiency in the built environment. But its implementation across the EU is still fragmented.

By sharing your perspective, you’ll help:

Map existing strategies and legal frameworks in your country 

Identify the challenges you face and the support you need 

Showcase best practices that work 

Contribute to a common EU vision for BIM in public tenders 

What’s in the survey?

National policies and legal frameworks 

Training and funding opportunities 

Practical use of BIM in public tenders 

SME participation 

EU-level collaboration and support mechanisms 

Who should take this survey?

Public buyers at national, regional, and local levels 

Large companies and SMEs involved in public tenders 

BIM experts, consultants, and associations 

Ministries and public procurement agencies 

What will your input help achieve?

A clearer picture of BIM practices across the EU 

Stronger, evidence-based EU guidance and support 

A shared foundation for collaboration, capacity building, and innovation 

It only takes 10 minutes!

Click here to take the survey https://ec.europa.eu/eusurvey/runner/bim-in-public-procurement

The survey is conducted by the Community for Public Buyers, which complements the European Commission’s strategy to improve public procurement in the EU by bringing together public authorities and other stakeholders.
There are various sub-groups in the community, and BIM and public procurement is one of them. The survey is running on the European Commission’s website and the responses will also be forwarded to the European Commission DG GROW, which is responsible for procurement.