How Architects can use Virtual Reality (VR) to Communicate Design Intent
As a practicing architect, I often found it difficult to
communicate design intent to our clients. While working on a building project,
we often used 3D modeling software/authoring tools but communicated the
schematic and conceptual designs to clients and other stakeholders by
generating 2D static renderings from fixed viewpoints on paper, Powerpoint
presentations or renders on a flat computer screen.
I realized that what we visualize, understand,
interpret and absorb from these traditional tools to communicate design
intent – the images on our screen, the 2D static renders, or the floorplans and
elevations on paper – are often disconnected from the reality of what’s planned
to be built inside and outside of the front door, and none of the architecture
software programs available could solve this problem. Since this medium is
neither to-scale nor immersive, clients often do not fully understand an
architect’s design intent, leading to significant collaboration-based
shortfalls that result in coordination-related problems later leading to time
and cost-based losses.
Now, imagine providing your client an immersive virtual tour
(using VR software for architecture and interior design) through their house or
workplace that is at full-scale and color, even before it is built. Seems too
good to be true? Not at all. This is how virtual reality architecture software
is improving the way design intent is communicated – by providing an immersive
and to-scale design experience, as real as it can get.
VR ensures that clients and other stakeholders – such as
engineering consultants and contractors – understand the design better and
before anything has been built. From the initial design stages right through to
the construction stage, when the need to effectively collaborate is at its
peak, the benefits offered by VR help the entire project teamwork with a
single version of the truth. You can even get your client to participate in the
design process, and finalize the design much faster with far fewer iterations.
The results: zero gaps in expectations and a significant jump in both project
profitability and client satisfaction.
The availability and affordability of high-performance
virtual reality head-mounted devices (HMDs) such as the Oculus Rift, HTC VIVE
and HP Mixed Reality Headset is improving by the day. Virtual Reality is now the new
and a very real solution that can address the pain points that architects have
suffered for long.
Immersive technologies are here! It is time for every
architect to adopts them too. It is a logical progression from the way we have
worked for years and solves a problem we have all long wished to solve.
If you are a SketchUp, Revit or Rhino user, check out Trezi to know more about real-time VR rendering and find out how you can convert your files from SketchUp to VR,
Revit to VR, and Rhino to VR in a single click. Message us in the form below to
learn how VR can benefit you and your company.
To learn about how architectural and design firms such as
Alcove are using VR to change the design process and conclude projects faster, read this
blog here.
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