Mrs CFS Posted May 5, 2019 Posted May 5, 2019 Hello I’ve recently been watching the new TV show on BBC ‘Your Home Made Perfect’ and was really impressed by the VR aspect. I wondered if anyone has used an architect company that’s using VR to help with the visualization of the end result? And if so would you recommend? We have submitted our plans for planning permission and before we start the build i’d be really keen to get an idea of the physical space internally to make sure we’ve covered everything. thanks in advance Chloe
Pete Posted May 5, 2019 Posted May 5, 2019 Our timber frame manufacturer did something similar for our build but it was not as good as we expected.
Jeremy Harris Posted May 6, 2019 Posted May 6, 2019 My wife struggled to visualise the internal spaces, too, so I opted to make a model, at 1:50 scale so that I could use plastic modelling figures to give a sense of proportion: 2
Nick1c Posted May 6, 2019 Posted May 6, 2019 Not really VR, but our architect uses a programme called BimX which allows you to fly around the building (once you get the hang of controlling it!) and get different internal & external views. I have an old iPad & it even works on that.
Mr Punter Posted May 6, 2019 Posted May 6, 2019 It would be really useful if someone did an on line 3d print service for house models from autocad. 1
Jeremy Harris Posted May 6, 2019 Posted May 6, 2019 On 06/05/2019 at 09:25, Mr Punter said: It would be really useful if someone did an on line 3d print service for house models from autocad. Expand Funnily enough I was thinking about this earlier today. I was looking at a 3D print of a mountain range and thinking that it should be relatively easy to convert a topographic plan plus a house design into a 3D model that could be printed.
RandAbuild Posted May 6, 2019 Posted May 6, 2019 Our stair people set up a VR demo in our living room, to show us what the stairs would look and feel like. The results were very impressive. After the stairs were in, they also took thousands of photos to build up a 3D view - results are here: http://woodenstairs.co.uk/testimonials/richard-northampton/
Ferdinand Posted May 6, 2019 Posted May 6, 2019 (edited) On 06/05/2019 at 09:33, JSHarris said: Funnily enough I was thinking about this earlier today. I was looking at a 3D print of a mountain range and thinking that it should be relatively easy to convert a topographic plan plus a house design into a 3D model that could be printed. Expand I might have thought rent a LIDAR for that - it seems to be what the Archaeological TV programmes use now for their Whizz-Bang element , and should be relatively cheap. I like the 3d presentation of the stairs, though (on the subject of 3d visualisations) I see that Richard of Northampton had one of his head displayed in the Norwich Museum. I hope you are better now, after all those years in that car park . Ferdinand Edited May 6, 2019 by Ferdinand 1
Jeremy Harris Posted May 6, 2019 Posted May 6, 2019 On 06/05/2019 at 10:12, Ferdinand said: I might have thought rent a LIDAR for that - it seems to be what the Archaeological TV programmes use now for their Whizz-Bang element , and should be relatively cheap. Ferdinand Expand LIDAR data is available from DEFRA to 250mm resolution: https://data.gov.uk/dataset/8b007edd-a886-44ca-9fa0-2ee2efc1248d/lidar-composite-dsm-25cm
Ferdinand Posted May 6, 2019 Posted May 6, 2019 On 06/05/2019 at 10:14, JSHarris said: LIDAR data is available from DEFRA to 250mm resolution: https://data.gov.uk/dataset/8b007edd-a886-44ca-9fa0-2ee2efc1248d/lidar-composite-dsm-25cm Expand That looks to be doable, but why are we not being charged for it? What happened? 1
Ed Davies Posted May 7, 2019 Posted May 7, 2019 I played with walk throughs a bit in SketchUp for early versions of my house design. I can't say I found them terribly useful and I didn't bother by the time I was converging on the final design. Maybe if you're trying to understand somebody else's design it would be more useful. Dunno. 3D modelling of construction aspects, on the other hand, was very useful to make sure I understood the structural engineer's drawings.
lizzie Posted May 7, 2019 Posted May 7, 2019 I had some walk throughs on my kitchen they were great - house was not built and it was the first look inside the house.
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