Office · 9 min read

3D Scans for Offices — Documentation before Renovation and Space Optimisation

Last updated: 7 July 2026

3D scans make office space objectively assessable: a LiDAR walkthrough delivers floor plan, area measurements and point cloud as a neutral data basis — for planning before the refurbishment, as proof afterwards. Especially for new-work concepts with hot desks and hybrid spaces, the scan replaces error-prone manual measuring.

Published 30 August 2025 Bitblade Vision · Office

Office space has changed structurally since 2020. Anyone rethinking the workplace today — hot desks, shared zones, collaboration areas, quiet retreats — needs an objective data foundation before and after the refit. A 3D scan is the pragmatic tool for the job: quick to capture, useful for years, and available to everyone involved at the same time.

Why classic dimensional surveys are no longer enough for modern offices

A classic dimensional survey delivers measurements, but no sense of the space or its atmosphere. With open-plan layouts, movable partitions, hybrid workstations and wellbeing zones, that simply isn't enough. Architects, interior designers, IT cabling teams and joinery contractors all want a shared model that shows more than a 2D sketch.

Before-scan: what you do with it

  • Architectural competitions — three architects work in parallel on the same existing building, without three separate site surveys.
  • Furniture and IT planning — bespoke fittings, cable routes and acoustic measures are modelled in advance.
  • Staff engagement — proposals for the new workstation layout can be discussed in the virtual model, with no disruption on site.
  • Cost estimating — quantities for partitions, flooring and ceilings read directly out of the model.

After-scan: documenting what was actually built

A second scan after the refit is almost always worthwhile — the built result invariably differs from the plans in the details. The after-scan serves as:

  • the basis for handover to facility managers,
  • evidential documentation for later disputes with the landlord or main contractor,
  • the starting point for the next change of use (which usually comes sooner than expected),
  • an inventory model for insurance and asset management.

Space optimisation with heatmaps

Combine a 3D model with additional sensors and you get a heatmap: which zones are used how often, where bottlenecks form, which rooms are underused. The foundation is the 3D model of the office plus occupancy-sensing hardware. On request we deliver this in a CAFM-compatible format.

What you typically pay for 1,500 m² of office space

A typical 1,500 m² office is scanned in a single business day (outside office hours). The Studio package (from €1,490) covers the standard use case — Matterpak bundle plus tour, plus floor plan with dimensions. If you also need a BIM as-built model, we quote that separately as a line-item add-on (manual work, not automated).

How an office project runs

  1. Preparation: rooms tidied, on-site anonymisation as required, access slots fixed in advance.
  2. Scan outside office hours — typically Friday evening through Sunday evening.
  3. Cloud processing on our EU pipeline. Tour online within 2–3 business days.
  4. Handover as embed code for the intranet, floor-plan PDF and Matterpak data package.

Conclusion

Anyone planning office space for the modern, long-term workplace needs a data foundation that goes beyond 2D drawings. A 3D scan before and after the refit is now standard practice on serious office-transformation projects. The cost is marginal compared with the overall refit budget — and the benefit, spread over several years, is substantial.

For an on-site walk-through and a tailored capture plan: get in touch, no obligation.

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