ProjectWise
ProjectWise is a comprehensive suite of engineering project collaboration and information management software developed by Bentley Systems, designed primarily for the architecture, engineering, construction, and operations (AECO) industries. It facilitates the secure sharing, versioning, and workflow management of project data, including documents, 3D models, and digital twins, across distributed teams to streamline infrastructure project delivery from design through operations.[1] The origins of ProjectWise trace back to 1990, when Opti Inter-Consult was founded in Turku, Finland, and developed the TeamMate document management software. In 1995, Bentley Systems invested in Opti Inter-Consult, becoming its exclusive vendor for TeamMate, and fully acquired the company in 1996, leading to the creation of ModelServer TeamMate for document management. Following a 1996 joint venture with Primavera to form WorkPlace Systems for facilities management, which merged back into Bentley in 1998, the product evolved from ActiveAsset Manager and was rebranded as ProjectWise to support project-based licensing and collaboration.[2] Over more than two decades of development, ProjectWise has become a cornerstone of Bentley's portfolio, now powered by the iTwin platform to integrate advanced capabilities such as digital design delivery for 3D workflows, portfolio intelligence for data-driven decision-making, robust data governance with role-based access controls, and enhanced management of engineering work-in-progress. It serves engineering firms, construction contractors, and owner-operators worldwide, enabling efficient collaboration on complex infrastructure projects while ensuring compliance and reducing rework.[1]Introduction
Overview
ProjectWise is a suite of engineering project collaboration software developed by Bentley Systems, designed specifically for the architecture, engineering, construction, and operations (AECO) industries.[1] It serves as a comprehensive platform for managing computer-aided design (CAD), building information modeling (BIM), geospatial, and other project data within a connected data environment (CDE), facilitating seamless data sharing and teamwork across project teams.[3] The primary purpose of ProjectWise is to enable engineering firms, construction contractors, and owner-operators to streamline workflows, enhance collaboration, improve design quality, and support efficient infrastructure delivery.[1] By providing a centralized repository for project information, it reduces errors and redundancies, allowing teams to focus on innovation and execution. For instance, users such as Mott MacDonald have reported significant time savings, including 158,000 hours (equivalent to 21,000 days) since January 2020 through the use of ProjectWise's Components Center.[1] ProjectWise has evolved to support data-centric workflows, leveraging Bentley's iTwin technology to create and synchronize digital twins during the design phase, while enabling IoT-ready deliverables for ongoing operations.[1] This shift emphasizes structured data management over traditional file-based systems, promoting interoperability and long-term asset performance. Additionally, it integrates with tools like Microsoft 365 and Autodesk applications to further enhance productivity in mixed-tool environments.[4]Key Components
ProjectWise features a modular architecture designed to support collaborative infrastructure project delivery, with core components that interconnect to manage data, workflows, and user interactions seamlessly.[1] ProjectWise Explorer serves as the primary client interface, enabling users to browse, access, and interact with projects via a desktop application that organizes documents and resources in a hierarchical structure. Recent releases, including version 2025.0.0, have incorporated modern UI updates to align with the Bentley ecosystem, improving navigation and visual consistency for enhanced productivity.[1] The ProjectWise Integration Server operates as the backend engine, handling data storage, retrieval, and synchronization while ensuring compatibility across diverse applications and environments.[1] To address varying user roles and project phases, ProjectWise provides tiered offerings: Manage for basic project access and document handling; Engineer for integrating design tools and enabling co-authoring; and Validate for advanced compliance and validation functionalities.[1] Cloud capabilities are delivered through ProjectWise Drive, which offers intuitive file access akin to a network drive, and ProjectWise Cloud, a hosted platform for scalable collaboration and component libraries.[1] The iTwin platform integrates across these components, facilitating component-based management and portfolio-level intelligence to support digital twin creation and lifecycle data synchronization.[1] Together, these elements form a cohesive system: Explorer and Drive provide accessible front-end interfaces, the Integration Server ensures robust backend operations, tiered models tailor access by role, and iTwin with cloud services enable extensible, data-driven infrastructure management.[1]History and Development
Origins
Opti Inter-Consult was founded in 1990 in Turku, Finland, with additional offices in the Netherlands and the United Kingdom, and it developed TeamMate as an early document management tool designed to handle technical files and facilitate collaboration among distributed teams.[2] TeamMate emerged as a solution for managing large volumes of project-related documents, particularly in environments requiring version control and secure access.[5] In 1995, Bentley Systems invested in Opti Inter-Consult as a strategic affiliate and became the exclusive vendor for TeamMate, integrating it into its ecosystem of engineering software.[2] This partnership laid the groundwork for deeper collaboration, and by 1996, Bentley fully acquired Opti Inter-Consult, incorporating TeamMate into its portfolio. The document management aspects went to Bentley Systems, while the facilities management components were used to form WorkPlace Systems Inc., a joint venture with Primavera Systems announced in November 1996.[2][5] The acquisition addressed the growing need for scalable data management in infrastructure engineering projects.[2] TeamMate underwent initial enhancements, including a brief rebranding to OfficeMate for its Windows-based version and the introduction of ModelServer TeamMate as a server-based solution for centralized file handling.[2] In 1998, following the merger of WorkPlace Systems back into Bentley—which had created ActiveAsset products—ActiveAsset Manager was rebranded as ProjectWise to emphasize project-based licensing and collaboration features, marking the transition from a basic document tool to a comprehensive suite.[5] This rebranding positioned ProjectWise as Bentley's flagship platform for secure file sharing, initially targeting engineering teams working with CAD files and project documents in distributed settings.[2] Early adoption occurred primarily in the architecture, engineering, construction, and operations (AECO) sectors, where it supported coordinated document workflows.[5]Evolution and Milestones
ProjectWise was officially launched by Bentley Systems in 1999 as a comprehensive engineering project collaboration solution, building on earlier document management technologies to enable secure sharing and management of project data across teams.[6] The first major release, ProjectWise 3.xx, arrived in May 2000 and introduced document-level security, allowing granular control over access to individual files within projects to enhance data protection and compliance in engineering workflows. This update marked an early milestone in addressing the growing need for secure collaboration in the architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) industries. Subsequent advancements came with the introduction of ProjectWise V8 in January 2003, which added key features like the Audit Trail for tracking document changes and the Preview Pane for quick file reviews without full downloads, improving efficiency in project tracking and review processes. The platform continued to evolve with the shift to the V8i series in November 2008, emphasizing deeper integration with Bentley's suite of design tools, such as MicroStation, to streamline workflows between document management and CAD/BIM applications. A significant pivot toward cloud-based delivery occurred in 2017, when Bentley launched ProjectWise 365 cloud services at its Year in Infrastructure event, leveraging Microsoft Azure to provide scalable, web-accessible collaboration targeted at small and medium-sized businesses seeking affordable entry into digital project delivery.[7][8] These services expanded access to ProjectWise's core capabilities without on-premises infrastructure, facilitating remote work and integration with tools like iTwin for digital twin development. By recent years, ProjectWise had achieved widespread adoption, with 46 U.S. State Departments of Transportation utilizing the platform for infrastructure project management as of 2023, underscoring its role in large-scale public sector initiatives.[6] In the years following, ProjectWise continued to advance with the CONNECT Edition releases, enhancing cloud capabilities and iTwin platform integration for digital twins. The 2025 release, announced in October 2025, introduced performance improvements, modern user interfaces, and AI-powered features for automated design annotation, further streamlining infrastructure project delivery.[9][10]Features and Functionality
Core Capabilities
ProjectWise provides robust, vendor-agnostic storage for engineering files, accommodating diverse formats such as CAD, BIM, geospatial, subsurface, structural, and reality mesh data. This capability enables seamless integration of content from multiple tools and disciplines without dependency on specific software vendors, supporting auto-filing based on metatags rather than rigid file hierarchies. By maintaining version control, attribution, and audit trails for all stored documents, it ensures data integrity and traceability throughout the project lifecycle.[11][1] Metadata management in ProjectWise allows users to govern project information through role-based attributes and smart workflows, promoting consistency and efficient data organization. Coupled with full-text search functionality, it facilitates rapid document retrieval across complex portfolios via intuitive interfaces and flexible hierarchies. This combination reduces search times significantly, enabling teams to locate and reuse assets—such as design components—that would otherwise take days to identify manually.[11][1] Reference file management handles dependencies in design files by establishing consistent workspaces that automatically synchronize updates across dispersed teams. When changes occur in referenced documents, notifications alert users immediately, preventing inconsistencies and minimizing rework in interdependent engineering models. This feature is essential for maintaining design accuracy in large-scale infrastructure projects.[11][1] Bentley's Infrastructure Schemas standardize data across projects by semantically aligning information from various disciplines into a federated, open structure. These schemas support the creation and synchronization of digital twins during design, maximizing insights and enabling reusable, data-centric workflows that span the asset lifecycle. In one sentence, this ties into broader digital twin development by providing a governed foundation for integrating engineering data.[11][1] BIM compliance tools in ProjectWise automate model validation against predefined rules, including support for ISO 19650 workflows, with features like change log history and traceable audit trails. These tools perform quality checks on BIM models to ensure adherence to standards, simplifying validation processes and reducing errors in deliverables. Overall, these core capabilities streamline engineering data management and workflows, enhancing efficiency and project outcomes.[11][1]Collaboration Tools
ProjectWise facilitates collaborative engineering through integrated co-authoring capabilities with Microsoft 365, allowing multiple users to edit documents simultaneously without disrupting workflows. This feature enables seamless real-time modifications to Office files stored within ProjectWise repositories, ensuring that changes are tracked and synchronized across team members.[1] For distributed teams, ProjectWise supports project sharing via secure access controls and federated login mechanisms, which authenticate users based on their identity and grant role-specific permissions to project data. Administrators can define granular access levels to folders, documents, and work areas, enabling external collaborators to view or contribute without compromising internal security. Shareable links further simplify distribution of project elements to authorized parties.[1] Workflow automation in ProjectWise streamlines team processes by automating approvals, reviews, and version control tasks. Customizable workflows guide documents through states such as draft, review, and approved, with automated notifications routing items to designated reviewers and enforcing sequential or parallel actions. Version control is embedded throughout, capturing snapshots of documents with unique labels, audit trails, and attribution to maintain traceability during iterative team edits. Cloud-based portfolio intelligence enhances cross-collaborator efficiency by providing intuitive search tools and standardization features across multiple projects. Advanced querying capabilities, combined with flexible hierarchies and digital component libraries, allow teams to locate and reuse assets rapidly, reducing design redundancy and promoting consistency in shared environments.[1][11] Engineering work-in-progress (WIP) support in ProjectWise includes real-time updates and notifications to keep distributed teams aligned on ongoing tasks. Dedicated WIP folders and managed workspaces enable isolated editing with automatic synchronization of changes, while notifications alert users to updates, conflicts, or approvals, ensuring timely collaboration on evolving designs.[1]Data Governance and Security
ProjectWise implements robust role-based access controls (RBAC) to manage permissions within its datasources, allowing administrators to assign roles to users that inherit specific security permissions for documents, folders, and work areas. This ensures that project team members only access resources appropriate to their responsibilities, preventing unauthorized modifications or views. Complementing RBAC, ProjectWise supports secure federated login through integration with identity providers like Azure AD via OIDC, enabling single sign-on with organizational credentials to enhance user authentication while maintaining data isolation.[1][12] Audit trails in ProjectWise provide comprehensive logging of user actions across the project lifecycle, capturing activities such as document check-ins, revisions, and access events in the datasource database. Administrators can configure logging options for documents, folders, and users, with defaults enabling all relevant records, and options to truncate or archive older entries to manage database size while preserving traceability.[13] Users view these trails via properties dialogs in ProjectWise Explorer, supporting compliance audits by detailing who performed what action and when. ProjectWise facilitates compliance with ISO 19650, the international standard for managing information over the whole life cycle of built assets in construction and civil engineering projects, through structured data models and automated workflows that enforce naming conventions, versioning, and information exchange protocols.[1][14] These features create a common data environment that supports the standard's requirements for information containers, authorization, and security, as demonstrated in implementations for infrastructure projects.[11] In the Validate tier of ProjectWise, powered by iTwin, advanced data validation tools enable automated checking of deliverables against project standards, including BIM rules, clash detection, and interdisciplinary reviews to ensure data quality and integrity.[1][15] This tier supports multi-discipline federated design validations, such as version comparisons and civil engineering-specific analyses, helping teams adhere to governance policies before data progression.[16] ProjectWise Cloud offers secure hosting for sensitive infrastructure projects via Bentley Infrastructure Cloud, featuring encrypted connections, proactive security updates, and enhanced monitoring to maintain data availability and protect against unauthorized access.[17] These options include zero-downtime deployments and automated scaling, pursuing compliance with high-security standards like FedRAMP for government-related data (as of 2025).[18] In AECO workflows, these governance mechanisms support secure data sharing across project phases.[1]Versions and Editions
Historical Versions
ProjectWise's development originated with its precursor, TeamMate 95, released in June 1995 by Opti Inter-Consult, a Finnish company in which Bentley Systems made a strategic investment that year to become the exclusive vendor for the document management software.[2] This early version laid the groundwork for engineering document management, focusing on basic collaboration for CAD files like those from MicroStation.[6] The first ProjectWise release, version 02.01.xx.xx, occurred in December 1998, with version 03.01.xx.xx arriving in May 2000 and introducing enhanced security features including document-level access controls to better protect sensitive project data in multi-user environments.[19] In January 2003, ProjectWise V8 marked a significant advancement, incorporating an Audit Trail for tracking document changes and user interface enhancements like the Preview Pane and Workspace Profiles to streamline navigation and customization for larger teams.[20] ProjectWise V8i followed in November 2008, emphasizing scalability improvements such as better support for distributed servers and larger datasets, enabling more robust performance in enterprise-scale deployments across global infrastructure projects.[21] The CONNECT Edition era began transitioning historical on-premises versions toward cloud integration, with Update 3.3 released in May 2020 to introduce precursors like enhanced web services and compatibility with Bentley Web Services Gateway for hybrid workflows.[22] Later CONNECT Edition updates, such as Update 3.4 (10.00.03.4xx) around 2021, continued on-premises support with further cloud integration enhancements, leading into year-based releases like ProjectWise 2023 and 2024 that maintained hybrid capabilities until the emphasis on cloud in 2025.[23] These versions collectively evolved ProjectWise from a basic document manager to a comprehensive collaboration platform, paving the way for cloud-based editions in later developments.[1]| Version | Release Date | Key Changes |
|---|---|---|
| TeamMate 95 (precursor) | June 1995 | Initial document management for CAD collaboration; Bentley's exclusive distribution.[2] |
| 02.01.xx.xx | December 1998 | Initial ProjectWise release following rebranding. |
| 03.01.xx.xx | May 2000 | Added document-level security for controlled access.[19] |
| V8 | January 2003 | Introduced Audit Trail, Preview Pane, and Workspace Profiles for improved tracking and usability.[20] |
| V8i | November 2008 | Enhanced scalability with distributed server support and larger dataset handling.[21] |
| CONNECT Edition Update 3.3 | May 2020 | Cloud precursors via web services and gateway integration.[22] |
| CONNECT Edition Update 3.4 | ~2021 | Further hybrid and cloud enhancements; continued on-premises support.[23] |