Archiving Projects in Autodesk Vault

Over the last several years, I have found myself implementing Autodesk Vault Professional for a growing number of Civil clients.  As our industry continues to acquire and consolidate, more and more people are turning to Vault to help connect geographically diverse project teams.

A few months ago, I was working with a client that was a new IMAGINiT customer.  They had an existing, replicated Vault setup containing about 1500 projects.  The purpose of my visit was to take a look at how they were doing things and make recommendations.  One item that struck me was that this firm had a process that when a project was completed, they would remove it from the Vault system and archive it on a different file server.  In my opinion, most of the benefit Vault brings (historical records, versions, milestones, attributes, quick searching, etc.) was being lost at the end of a project.  Furthermore, the only reason this was being done was for the users.  They didn’t want the completed projects cluttering their project lists!

Thankfully, Vault has a much more elegant way to handle this dilemma and all of the project data can stay inside of the Vault where it belongs.

Take this quick example:

We have a series of project folders contained inside of a Vault folder. 

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In this case, 3 projects are active and one is archived.  To make this work, I created a quick lifecycle definition and assigned it to the project folders.  This projects lifecycle definition contains only two states:  active and archived (although this could certainly be expanded to things like cancelled, on hold, etc.). 

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The magic happens in the security tab for the “archived” state.  In my case below, I am explicitly stating that only the administrator user should be able to see the folder.  This also implicitly says that no one else should be able to see it.

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The result is that when the administrator logs into the system, all project folders will be displayed.  This is great if a project needs to be brought back to life and used again.  It also solves the user problem in that they will not see the folder if it is tagged archived.

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Obviously, this is a simple example but the situation wasn’t the first time I have heard of people pulling data out of Vault for archival purposes.  I think everyone will agree that given all the benefits of utilizing the Vault system, the data is best left there.

About the Author

Joe Hedrick, LS, EIT

Solutions Architect<br><br>As a Solutions Architect, Joe assists clients in developing implementation plans for Autodesk Infrastructure products as well as provides consulting services. <br><br>Joe has over 25 years of experience in land surveying and civil engineering encompassing field-data collection, site design and layout, residential subdivision design, and land planning. He is an EIT and a licensed land surveyor in Virginia, and earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Civil Engineering Technology from Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia. <br><br>

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