
From brief to editable floor plan
Describe the space you need and get a complete floor plan back in seconds.
It's generated as a real, editable drawing, not a flat image, so you can start refining right away.
Architectural practice
without the compromise.

Describe the space you need and get a complete floor plan back in seconds.
It's generated as a real, editable drawing, not a flat image, so you can start refining right away.

Generate several layout options from the same brief and compare them side by side.
Explore more directions in minutes than you could draw by hand in a day.

Every generated plan follows real spatial logic, with rooms, circulation, and openings that actually make sense.
It's a layout that an architect would draw, not something generic.
You describe constraints, site dimensions, required rooms, programme adjacencies, and the generator proposes plan options that respect them. The output is real, editable geometry, not an image. Treat it as a starting point a junior would have given you, then reshape until it is the plan you want.
Each brief produces between three and twelve plan options depending on how constrained the brief is. A tightly specified five-room villa converges fast; an open programme on an irregular site fans out wider. You can pin promising options and discard the rest.
It reasons about spatial fit, adjacencies, light, and circulation. It does not size beams or check spans, assume it gives you a viable layout to study with a structural engineer, not a structurally vetted plan. The two phases stay separate, which is how we like it.
Yes. Sketch a bubble diagram or a rough massing and the generator uses it as a soft constraint. You get options that respect your sketched intent without forcing the geometry to match it pixel-for-pixel, the sketch acts as a directional prior, not a template.