
#Home planner 5d professional#
Our app makes realistic renderings of user designs, complete with shadows, physical lighting, and reflections, like a professional but for a sliver of the price. So, we built the first version of Planner 5D. The ones tailored toward amateurs were insufficient, while the ones for professionals were confusing. We each had a vision for a unique interior for our respective spaces, but couldn’t find any tools that matched our visions and skills. I bought an apartment with plans to renovate it, while Sergey bought a piece of land on which he planned to build a house.

Planner 5D came about because Sergey and I were both encountering home planning difficulties. What was the inspiration behind the project? Already, we have over 40 million users who have designed over 80 million projects. Planner 5D looks and works like the Sims, but for real life, and for designing your dream home.īasically, it’s an easy-to-use 3D home design tool that lets anyone, without any technical skills, fully customize their homes-everything from wall colors to flooring materials to room dimensions.īut it’s also quite cutting-edge, in that it applies AI, VR, and AR to that end. In just a few sentences, what is Planner 5D? Then, I founded Planned 5D with my friend Sergey Nosyrev in 2011. I was also the Head of UI/UX at Oversun Scalaxy, the first Russian cloud hosting provider a UI designer at ABBYY and the Art Director of Virtual Space, a web studio. I began my career working as a web and graphic designer and, during university, founded my own design studio. We had the chance to discuss the hardships of starting a business, the inspiration behind the company, and features that make the app feel more like a game of The Sims than that of a home design tool.Ĭare to introduce yourself and your role at Planner 5D? I'm currently in the process of buying a house and have gone through my fair share of apps only to be generally disappointed with the experience.ĭuring this time, I actually had to the chance to talk with Alexey Sheremetyev of Planner 5D, an app that brings VR and AI into home design, to learn more about his home design tools that are available Web, iOS, and more. It doesn't take long after downloading one to realize if it's going to be a dud or not due to paywalls, but it's also surprising just how poorly some of them are laid out. There's an app for seemingly everything these days, but a lot of the time it requires wading through lots of poorly-designed or ad-heavy apps to find one that fits your needs. So let your imagination fly with the magic cube.A look into entrepreneurship, AI, and home design You can change the material on each side of the box. Once you've dragged the cube into your plan you can change the material of the cube and create tables, or outcrops on the roof, walls and so on. So back to that cube thingy we mentioned at the beginning of this Planner 5D review. I guess you could include a 5m x 5m room to the right of your design to provide a sort of scale but there's no way to print to 1:50 or 1:100 or other standard scale.


This means that there's no way to print to scale. So the only option is to save something as a snapshot and then print it out. Surprisingly I couldn't find any way to print out a floor plan or shap shot. Planner 5D only saves in planner 5D format so there's no way of exporting the designs into a format that could be used by other floor plan software. I couldn't find any way to import a drawing to act as a template to trace or to import files of any standard drawing plan format into 5D Planner.
