A design on paper is hard to feel. A floor plan is a top-down drawing with numbers on it. Even a nice 3D picture is still just one frozen angle someone chose for you. When you are about to spend real money building an office, a shop, or a home, "hard to feel" is a problem. You want to stand inside it first.
So here is something many business owners do not know is possible, and that it costs almost nothing to do. The same 3D file your architect or engineer already made can be turned into a space you walk through, right in a normal web browser, on your phone or your computer. Below is exactly what that means and how we do it.
A flat plan versus a space you can walk
The difference is the whole point. One you read. The other you experience.
A drawing or a single render
- You read it, you do not feel it
- One angle someone else picked
- Hard to judge how a room really feels
- Easy to miss something until it is built
- Clients and partners nod, but do not really see it
A walkable 3D tour
- You move through it like a video game
- Any angle you want, any room
- You feel the size and the flow
- You catch issues before they cost money
- Anyone you send the link to can walk it too
How we make it
The part that surprises people is how few steps it takes, and that none of them need an expensive program or a monthly fee. Here is the whole journey, start to finish.
The 3D file your architect or engineer already made. We do not start from scratch.
We turn that file into a format a web browser can open and move around in. This part takes seconds.
We hand you a link. Open it, press Walk, and move through the space on any device.
The technology that lets you walk the space is free and open. The only real work is preparing the file and building the tour around it. There is no monthly software bill to keep it running.
And we do not stop at what is already drawn
Here is where it gets useful for anyone who is still planning. We can also add to the space by describing it. Point at an empty corner of the lot and say "put a two story office there." It appears in the 3D space, and you walk in to see it. Want it wider, or moved, or a different roof. We change it, and you walk it again. You are shaping the building by talking, not by learning a design program.
Real example we are working on: a client building a new office. Instead of guessing from a flat plan, they will walk the office before construction, try the layout, and ask for changes while changes are still free. That is the whole idea. Decide inside the space, not after the concrete is poured.