Product

Everything between the capture and the answer.

Construkted Reality takes the data you fly, drive, or scan and turns it into something everyone on the job can open, measure, and understand. In a browser. Here's what it does, in the order you'll use it.

What can you upload?

Point clouds, polygon meshes, tiled models, and orthomosaic imagery: the working outputs of photogrammetry and LiDAR pipelines. Gaussian splat support is releasing very soon.*

Upload compressed archives (.zip, .rar, .7z) one file at a time and track progress from your profile. Point clouds and orthomosaics arrive in practically any EPSG coordinate system, so the scan lands where the site actually is; meshes come in local coordinates, and built-in georeferencing tools place them on the globe. Already processed your model in another tool? Tiled models upload directly, no re-processing. Your upload becomes an Asset: hosted, viewable, and never overwritten by anything you do to it later.

*Footnote applies wherever splats are mentioned: support is releasing very soon.

Capacity by plan

  • Storage: 5 GB free → 2 TB on Premium
  • Polygon and texture caps: none. Storage is the only capacity limit.
See the full plan matrix

What does your client need to open it?

A browser. You send a link; the scan opens on whatever laptop, tablet, or phone they already have. Nothing to install, no account needed to view, no "which software do I need?" email.

Private by default

Nothing is public unless you make it public. Private assets start on Basic. Whole private projects start on Plus, the first plan licensed for client work.

Go public on your terms

Making work public is a deliberate choice. Public work gets a stable URL, stays credited to you, and joins the public gallery where anyone can find and view it. Discovery is never paywalled.

Embed it anywhere

On any paid plan, assets embed in your own site with a copy-paste iframe: your portfolio, your client's intranet, a project page. The demo on our own homepage is exactly that embed.

What can you measure on a scan?

Distance, area, and volume, taken on the actual captured geometry rather than eyeballed off generic imagery. Measure the stockpile from your desk. Pin the number to the exact spot it describes.

Measurements are made for communicating and reviewing the work: they put defensible numbers in front of your team and your client on the real scan. Distance and area are on every plan; volume measurement starts on Plus. Construkted Reality sits alongside your survey-grade pipeline. It's where the numbers get seen and discussed, not where you certify them.

Photoreal gravel stockpile enclosed in a glowing volumetric measurement shell with footprint polygon and height line

How do annotations work?

Four kinds of markup, all pinned to the geometry: notes (a pin plus rich text and media), measurements, drawings (paths and polygons), and imported features from GeoJSON, KML, or GPX.

Every annotation lives in a Project layer that references your capture. The original data is never touched. That separation is the quiet superpower: one capture can serve many projects, interpretations stay auditable against the untouched source, and handing someone your findings never means handing over your raw data.

How do teams work in it together?

Projects are shared workspaces: compose multiple assets into one scene, measure and mark it up with your team, and settle questions on the model instead of in email threads. Changes appear when the page loads. Everyone reviews the same version, always.

Multiple assets, one scene

Bring several captures into a single project (the site scan, the imported boundary file, the reference model) and interpret them together.

Discussion on the model

Comments and callouts live where the question is, not in a thread nobody can find two weeks later. The model is the meeting room.

Team plans

Pro brings 3 team members and Premium brings 15, at one flat price per organization. Your whole crew works in the same projects.

Can you get your data back out?

Yes. Your scans are stored and served as 3D Tiles, an open standard rather than a private format. Every plan from Plus up allows you to download both the web-ready tileset and your original uploaded file. Links stay stable, and public work is always credited to you.

  • Open format Served as 3D Tiles, readable far beyond this platform.
  • Original + tileset Download what you gave us and what we built from it.
  • Stable URLs The link you sent a client keeps working.

The small print, answered plainly

Is my data used to train AI?

No. Construkted Reality is a hosting and presentation engine. Your data is stored to be viewed, measured, and shared by the people you choose. That's it.

Does it work on phones and tablets?

Yes. Shared links open in the browser on whatever device your client already has: desktop, tablet, or phone. Nothing to install anywhere.

Which coordinate systems are supported?

Point clouds and orthomosaics upload in practically any EPSG coordinate system. Meshes and Gaussian splats* arrive in local coordinates, and the platform includes georeferencing tools to place local-coordinate datasets where they belong on the globe.

Do I have to re-process my data to use it here?

No. Upload the working outputs of your existing pipeline (point clouds, meshes, orthomosaics, or already-tiled models) and they become browser-viewable assets as they are.

Try it on a real scan.

The free plan is enough to upload a capture, measure it, annotate it, and send your first link.