flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

New Tool Takes PDFs Beyond 2D

New Tool Takes PDFs Beyond 2D

Our IT expert puts a new PDF creation package through its paces and sees value for AEC firms that want to move more aggressively into 3D documents.


By By Jeff Yoders, Contributing Editor | May 18, 2011
This article first appeared in the May 2011 issue of BD+C.

The venerable portable document format (created in 1993 by Adobe Systems), an open standard since 2008, has evolved well beyond the simple document format it was created to be.

Today’s PDFs encapsulate a complete description of a fixed-layout 2D document that includes the text, fonts, images, and 2D vector graphics that comprise their root documents. Thanks to advances in 3D technology PDFs can now have 3D drawings embedded within them. They can even support Flash animations.

However, the question must be asked: How do these advances benefit AEC firms? AEC users have long relied on PDFs for large sheet sets and documents necessary to create their projects. As AEC firms augment their workflows from 2D to 3D, the PDF is not being abandoned. It is just being augmented for 3D.

“People are using PDF for real work,” said Don Jacob, VP of engineering at Bluebeam Software. “We’re seeing users employing it for punch lists, recording status during construction (completed or not completed), and operations matters.”

Bluebeam is taking its flagship PDF creation and editing software beyond 2D workflows with its new version, Bluebeam PDF Revu 9. I tried out the various Revu 9 programs for a month and a half in Bluebeam’s beta period.

The recently released software includes navigating-embedded 3D images and editing 3D models through a simple form tool. A premium edition, Bluebeam PDF Revu extreme, includes such features as OCR to make scanned PDFs text-searchable, forms creation, and scripting.  Bluebeam has released new versions of its Standard and CAD versions of Revu 9, too, with batch processing of AutoCAD sheetsets and a new VisualSearch.  Its search capabilities go far beyond simple text-only search and allow users to search for markings.

Revu 9 Standard: Now with a view

The big news with Revu 9 Standard is the viewing of 3D files. Bluebeam incorporated several ways to work with a 3D PDF. You can control it with your mouse or navigate your model through a toolbar; discrete views (for example, piping, structural) are also available in a dropdown menu. It’s a robust 3D viewer that lets you decide how you want to use it.

I found Revu 9 Standard ($179 per seat) to be a very stable 3D viewer. Built as a .NET application with managed memory code, the 3D viewer in Revu 9 is not susceptible to the crashing behavior that plagues some other 3D PDF viewers.

With .NET, memory is managed by Windows itself, which does a good job of following how much memory you’re using. This is preferable to letting the application write to memory sectors it shouldn’t be writing to, which can result in crashes. I experienced no crashes during my trial run. The application’s code is also written to allow GPU acceleration, so if you have a graphics card that supports it, the 3D viewer really sings when accelerated.

Using the multiple views available from the 3D panel, you can isolate the sections of a model you want to look at simply by highlighting them. If for some reason you want to come back to a certain section down the road, you can take a snapshot of that 3D model and paste it (in flattened form) into a 2D PDF for downstream use.

The second big advance in Revu 9’s standard edition is VisualSearch. Bluebeam PDF Revu has always had the ability to search a PDF for text. Now you can search visually. Click the VisualSearch radio button from the Search menu and it gives you a rectangle to select markings, symbols, or anything in the PDF that is not text. It will then show you all instances of that symbol in your plans. This PDF-searching tool is believed to be the first searchable symbol capability ever created for the format.

In addition to giving you a quick way to find symbols, Bluebeam also added the ability to apply annotations or hyperlinks to search results. This affords the opportunity to turn this information over to consultants and contractors further downstream.

Finally, Bluebeam has added the ability to measure for takeoffs with cutouts from its measurement tool. One of the concerns Bluebeam heard from AEC users was what if you’re measuring an area that’s cut out, such as a kitchen island, you couldn’t block off a place for it. The new measurement capability recognizes lossless vector information so it can give you accurate measurements. The new cutout tool lets you cut out sections and it will give you accurate square footage with that part of the still lossless data removed from the overall area. It’s a small but very useful improvement for architects and engineers.

One other enhancement to the mark-up tools: If your drawing has an area with two or more items that need to be called out, you can now put more than one leader on a call-out. Not earth-shattering, but worthwhile.

Revu 9 CAD: More control over output

The CAD edition ($239 per seat) incorporates all the features of the standard edition, along with one-click PDF creation and batch PDF creation from AutoCAD, Revit, and SolidWorks. Using Revu 9 CAD’s improved AutoCAD plug-in, for instance, you can add a whole folder of DWGs, or select individual files within a folder of DWGs and batch process them with one click. You can change the order of files in a folder with the batch tool or individually change the layout of how your final output file will look. You can also add stamps in your final PDF file from Revu 9 CAD’s stamp editor. Revu 9 CAD gives you a lot more control to determine what your final output PDFs look like. When you add files to a batch list, you can add an entire AutoCAD sheet set to the batch.

 “Sheet sets are the standard method for handling physical plots,” according to Bluebeam VP Jacob. “Bringing them into the virtual plot, PDFs, reduces that redundant workflow.” Using the batch creation capability, you can bring in a sheet set where 90% of the work has been done, change the order, and click to get the order you want without altering the existing sheet set in AutoCAD.

The CAD edition was the one I tried out for most of my review period. I found the batch tools to be simple to use and useful for more than just CAD applications. In fact,  I used it to create a batch of contracts from Microsoft Word files I wanted to convert to PDF; the output worked just as fine as it did for AutoCAD DWGs.

Revu 9 eXtreme: No middle ground

Too high or too low, there’s no in-between for Revu 9 eXtreme ($299 per seat). Packing more computing wallop than a Gary Cherone vocal, eXtreme has all the features of the CAD and Standard editions and adds optical character recognition (OCR) PDF form creation for procedures such as RFIs. The eXtreme edition also adds a scripting feature for power users who want to write their own PDF editing code scripts.

The problem with many PDFs on construction sites is that at some point someone scanned them from a physical document set. That makes the file a flat image converted to a PDF, and now it’s not searchable—just a dumb 2D image with lots of words and pictures that aren’t readily accessible. With OCR the text of any PDF becomes searchable. Go to the document menu and click on OCR, type what you want to search for, and the OCR process will run over the entire image, recovering the specific data you need even if it’s been flattened.

Using Revu 9 eXtreme to create forms, you can draw in text boxes and line up form fields in the forms tool to give your document a more professional-looking feel. You can also edit existing PDF forms; for example, you can turn check boxes into radio buttons or style them any way you want.

Another good tool for forms—a feature that firms which use PDFs for punchlists requested from Bluebeam—is the ability to apply custom statuses to any mark-up. You can add text to a component (such as “accepted” or “not accepted”) for mark-ups that have been noted to be problem areas. This nice, simple feature is available in all versions of Revu 9.

With the right design software, Revu 9 is capable of delivering a potent 3D workflow to design firms and construction companies preparing to make the switch from 2D to 3D.

Jeff (“BIMBoy”) Yoders blogs on BIM, CAD, and IT issues of importance to AEC professionals and firms at www.BDCnetwork.com.

Related Stories

BIM and Information Technology | Aug 27, 2015

Zebra Imaging launches 3D hologram creator for Autodesk Revit

Company promises new product will bring "easy creation process" to holographic imaging in AEC community.

Office Buildings | Aug 24, 2015

British company OpenDesk offers open-sourced office furniture

Offices can “download” their furniture to be made locally, anywhere.

Energy Efficiency | Aug 24, 2015

Google develops Google Maps for solar energy

The tool offers high-resolution aerial maps, like the one used in Google Earth, to estimate the total sunlight a rooftop receives throughout the year.

Sponsored | BIM and Information Technology | Aug 20, 2015

Part II - Will BIM Work as a Deliverable? A Legal Perspective on BIM

Having the right counsel on your team can be the difference between long drawn-out negotiations and breaking new ground to meet the owner’s needs.

BIM and Information Technology | Aug 17, 2015

Reimagined cursors can change digital imaging

A University of Montreal professor has developed a system that elevates 2D cursors for a 3D world.

BIM and Information Technology | Aug 6, 2015

After refueling its capital tank, WeWork acquires BIM consultant Case

The merger is expected to help standardize how WeWork designs and builds out office space. 

Giants 400 | Aug 6, 2015

BIM GIANTS: Robotic reality capture, gaming systems, virtual reality—AEC Giants continue tech frenzy

Given their size, AEC Giants possess the resources and scale to research and test the bevy of software and hardware solutions on the market. Some have created internal innovation labs and fabrication shops to tinker with emerging technologies and create custom software tools. Others have formed R&D teams to test tech tools on the job site.

Smart Buildings | Aug 5, 2015

8 cities win Bloomberg's 'open data' award

The competition, called "What Works Cities," promotes innovation in city government by making the massive amounts of city operations data more publicly accessible to better improve issues like job creation, public health, and blight. 

Multifamily Housing | Aug 5, 2015

FacadeRetrofit.org: A new database for tracking commercial and multifamily façade upgrades

The site allows users to submit information about new projects, or supplement information on those already posted.

BIM and Information Technology | Aug 4, 2015

Augmented reality app provides step-by-step help for repairing equipment

The developers of Remote AR have discovered a new application for AR technology that could apply to all types of industries, including commercial buildings.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




Great Solutions

41 Great Solutions for architects, engineers, and contractors

AI ChatBots, ambient computing, floating MRIs, low-carbon cement, sunshine on demand, next-generation top-down construction. These and 35 other innovations make up our 2024 Great Solutions Report, which highlights fresh ideas and innovations from leading architecture, engineering, and construction firms.

halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021