Keyplan 3d Second Floor Page
Mara pulled up the original scan again. Then she did something she’d never done before: she overlaid a point cloud from a new LiDAR survey of the actual house, as it stood today, cracks and all. Keyplan 3D wasn’t built for this. The software screamed error messages— non-planar surface detected, component intersection failure —but she forced it. Layer by layer, she manually pinned the digital second floor to the messy, sinking, century-old reality below.
The reply came three hours later. Not from the lawyer. From Mrs. Whitmore herself. keyplan 3d second floor
Mara Chen stared at the screen, her finger hovering over the trackpad. Keyplan 3D, Second Floor —the project file name glowed in crisp white letters against the dark UI. She’d built this model for the Whitmore renovation: a second-floor addition over a 1920s bungalow, complete with dormer windows, a reading nook, and a walk-in closet that doubled as a storm shelter. The clients had wept with joy at the render. Mara pulled up the original scan again
She zoomed into the southeast corner—the nook. In real life, that corner sat over a void: a chimney breast that had been removed in the 1970s but never documented. Keyplan didn’t know that. How could it? Garbage in, garbage out. Except the garbage wasn’t hers. It was the original architect’s, from 1923, whose hand-drawn plans had been digitized and sold as a “verified historical model” on an asset marketplace. Not from the lawyer