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Enviz Free Trial: Transform SketchUp, Revit & 3DS Max Into Immersive VR/AR Experiences, Multi-Device Access

So here's something that caught my attention the other day.

A property developer in Sydney was trying to sell an apartment that didn't exist yet. Not "under construction" didn't exist. More like "we have plans and some pretty renderings" didn't exist. The buyer was in Singapore. And somehow, the buyer put down a deposit after walking through the place on their phone.

That's Enviz.

The platform turns your architectural files—SketchUp, Revit, 3DS Max, whatever you've got—into something you can actually walk through. On your phone, your tablet, in a web browser, or if you're fancy, on a VR headset like Meta Quest or Apple Vision Pro. No gaming PC required. No complicated setup. Just upload your file and it becomes a space people can explore.

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What Actually Happens When You Use Enviz

The process is straightforward enough that it feels almost too simple.

You've got a 3D model sitting on your computer. Maybe it's a house you designed in SketchUp. Maybe it's an office building from Revit. Maybe it's a luxury apartment rendered in 3DS Max with all the fancy materials and lighting.

You upload that file to Enviz. The platform processes it—usually takes less than a day, sometimes just a few hours. Then you get an email with a link and a QR code.

That link? That's your space. Anyone can click it and suddenly they're standing inside your design. They can walk around (or teleport if they're impatient). Look up at the ceiling. Check the view from the balcony. Spin the whole building around like a dollhouse to see it from every angle.

The person viewing doesn't need to download anything. Works on iPhone, Android, whatever. If they've got a VR headset, the experience gets even more immersive. But the barrier to entry is basically zero.

Who's Actually Using This

The user base is broader than you'd expect.

Ray White, one of Australia's biggest real estate agencies, uses it to showcase properties that haven't been built yet. Potential buyers can tour the place without leaving their couch. The sales team can do guided virtual tours with clients on the other side of the world.

Sekisui House—a major Japanese home builder—uses Enviz to let customers explore their future homes. Different finishes, different layouts, all accessible from their phone.

Architects at firms like The Agency use it for design review. Instead of looking at plans on paper or spinning a 3D model on a screen, the team can literally walk through the space together. Find problems before construction starts. Make changes when they're still cheap to make.

Home builders like G.J. Gardner Homes and Hall & Hart have their entire catalogs in Enviz. A buyer can compare different floor plans by actually standing in each one. That's different than looking at 2D layouts.

The Technical Side (Without Being Technical)

Enviz works directly with native files. That matters more than it sounds like it should.

  • SketchUp: Just upload the .skp file. Done.
  • Revit: Upload the .rvt file directly. No export needed.
  • 3DS Max: .max files work straight away.
  • ArchiCAD or Rhino: Export as .skp first, then upload.

The platform handles the conversion automatically. It figures out the textures, the lighting, the reflections. It generates teleport points so navigation makes sense. It creates a dollhouse view so people can see the whole layout at once.

If something's not quite right—a wall facing the wrong way, a navigation point in a weird spot—you can edit it in the Enviz portal. Move teleport points around. Adjust the dollhouse camera. Re-submit the model if you need to make bigger changes.

Pricing: What You're Actually Paying For

Here's where it gets interesting. Enviz offers different ways to pay depending on what you need:

Plan Type What You Get Best For Monthly Price Annual Price
Lite Basic virtual experiences
Dollhouse view
Easy sharing
Multi-device access
Small projects
Individual designers
Testing the platform
$15/month $36/year
(20% discount)
Design with Enhanced All Lite features
Collaboration tools
Design review
Coordination features
Team workflows
Architects
Design firms
Collaborative projects
$35/month $168/year
(20% discount)
Sell with Comprehensive All Enhanced features
Data analytics
Portal integrations
Custom experiences
Listing pages
Enriched media
Real estate developers
Sales teams
Marketing professionals
$65/month $624/year
(20% discount)
Space Creation Individual space conversions
Pay-per-space model
One-off projects
Occasional use
$30/space $300/year
(includes 2 months free)

Note: Prices exclude GST

The smart play? 👉 Start with your first Enviz Space, which includes a discount code already applied. The platform offers a 14-day free trial, so you can test everything before committing real money.

If you're a CGI studio or need bulk purchases, they offer enterprise pricing with packs of 10 or 100 spaces at significant discounts.

The Different Ways to View

This is where Enviz gets clever. One space, multiple viewing modes:

Walkable Mode: You're inside the space. Walk forward, look around, move through doorways. Feels like you're actually there.

Clickable Mode: Tap where you want to go. Faster than walking, good for showing someone around quickly.

Dollhouse View: See the entire building from outside. Spin it around, zoom in on specific rooms, get a sense of the whole layout.

On-Site AR: Point your phone at an empty lot and see the building appear there at full scale. Helps people understand the size and positioning.

Headset Mode: Put on a Meta Quest or Apple Vision Pro and you're completely immersed. This is the full VR experience.

Tabletop View: The building appears on your table or desk. Walk around it, look at it from different angles.

Browser Mode: Can't or don't want to use the app? Open it in any web browser. Limited features compared to the app, but still functional.

All of these work from the same uploaded file. You create one space, people can view it however makes sense for them.

Floor Plans Get Special Treatment

Not everyone has fully modeled 3D spaces. Sometimes you've just got floor plans.

Enviz has a free floor plan visualizer tool. Upload your 2D plans and it creates a true-to-scale 3D experience. Not as detailed as a full architectural model, but surprisingly useful for helping people understand spatial relationships.

This matters for developers showing off-the-plan apartments. Or architects wanting to communicate layouts to clients who struggle with 2D drawings. Or anyone who needs to explain "this room connects to this room which opens to the balcony" without pointing at lines on paper.

The Sales and Marketing Angle

Property developers have figured something out: people are more confident buying things they can explore.

With Enviz, you can:

  • Embed virtual tours on your website
  • Share links via email or messaging
  • Generate QR codes for print materials
  • Do guided tours with remote clients
  • Track viewer engagement analytics (who looked at what, for how long)
  • Integrate with real estate portals

The "Sell with Comprehensive" plan is built specifically for this. You get data showing which rooms people spent time in, which features they returned to, how many times they viewed the space. That's valuable information for understanding what buyers care about.

The platform also supports the "Space Plus" add-on—artist-driven design enhancements that take your automated conversion and polish it to photorealistic quality. This is for high-end projects where the visual quality needs to rival professional still renderings.

Collaboration Features for Design Teams

The "Design with Enhanced" plan adds tools specifically for architects and designers working together.

Multiple people can view the same space simultaneously. You can drop comments and notes directly in the 3D environment—"this wall should move three feet that way" or "let's try a different window here."

Version control happens through the project management system. You can group multiple variations of the same design (different materials, different layouts) under one project. Compare them side by side.

The platform integrates with existing workflows. Push files to GitHub if you want version control. Connect to Supabase for database functionality. Export data for use in other tools.

What the Support System Looks Like

The help center is comprehensive. Full documentation, video tutorials, troubleshooting guides.

If you hit a problem, customer service typically responds within 24 hours. Based on user reviews, they're genuinely helpful—not just copy-pasting responses from a script.

The platform has a 90-day return policy on equipment purchases and a Price Match Assurance for competitive pricing.

There's also an affiliate program. Share your unique link, earn rewards when people sign up through it. The partner program offers a minimum 10% commission on all conversions and ongoing subscriptions for projects you run.

The Practical Limitations

Let's be honest about what this isn't.

The web viewer is more limited than the mobile app. Fewer features, less smooth performance. If you want the full experience, you need the app or a VR headset.

File processing takes time. Usually a day, sometimes longer for complex files. If you need something immediately, that's not happening.

The platform works best with clean, well-organized models. If your file has flipped faces, weird geometry, or poorly constructed elements, the automated conversion might struggle. You can fix things in the editor, but it's easier to upload clean files to begin with.

Some users report a learning curve with the more advanced features. The basic upload-and-share is simple. Managing complex projects with multiple spaces, team collaboration, and custom configurations takes more time to master.

When This Makes Sense

Enviz solves specific problems really well.

Problem: Client can't visualize the space from 2D plans. Solution: Give them a link they can open on their phone.

Problem: International buyer can't travel to see the property. Solution: Virtual tour from their living room.

Problem: Design team scattered across different locations needs to review together. Solution: Everyone logs into the same space, discusses changes in real time.

Problem: Sales presentation needs to stand out from competitors. Solution: Let prospects explore the space on a VR headset instead of showing them another slideshow.

Problem: Need to explain how a building will look on a site before construction starts. Solution: AR mode shows it at actual scale in the actual location.

If these are problems you're dealing with, Enviz is worth trying. If you're happy with traditional renders and floor plans, it's probably overkill.

Getting Started Without Commitment

The platform makes it pretty easy to test without risking much.

Your 👉 first Enviz Space comes with a discount already applied. Just upload your model file (.rvt, .skp, or .max), enter payment details, and wait for the conversion.

You get a free Enviz account automatically. Access the portal, manage your spaces, create projects that group related experiences.

The 14-day free trial gives you time to explore all the features, test it with real clients or team members, decide if it's worth the ongoing cost.

If you don't have 3D models yet but want to see what Enviz can do, try the free floor plan visualizer. Upload some 2D plans, see how the platform handles them.

The Device Ecosystem

One of Enviz's strengths is device compatibility.

Mobile and Tablet:

  • iOS (iPhone, iPad) - download from App Store
  • Android phones and tablets - download from Google Play

VR Headsets:

  • Meta Quest II
  • Meta Quest III
  • Meta Quest Pro
  • Apple Vision Pro

Desktop:

  • Any web browser (Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge)
  • Note: Web version has limited features compared to the app

Integration Partners:

  • Chaos Corona
  • Autodesk 3DS Max
  • V-Ray rendering engine

You create once, people view on whatever device they have. That flexibility matters when you're trying to show a space to lots of different people with different tech setups.

The Competition Context

Enviz isn't the only player in architectural visualization, but it's positioned differently than most alternatives.

Traditional rendering studios give you still images or animations. Beautiful, but static. You see what they decided to show you.

Other VR platforms require specialized equipment or complicated setup. Not accessible for casual viewing.

Some competitors focus on gaming-quality graphics at the expense of ease of use. Enviz prioritizes "good enough" graphics that anyone can access over bleeding-edge visuals that require high-end hardware.

The sweet spot seems to be: professional quality output, consumer-friendly viewing, reasonable price point.

Real Usage Patterns

Based on user feedback and reviews, here's how people actually use Enviz:

Architects: Upload multiple design options for client review. Client explores each option on their tablet during a presentation. Team makes decisions about which direction to pursue while everyone's still looking at the same space.

Property Developers: Create spaces for entire developments. Sales team sends links to prospects. Prospect explores at their own pace, returns to rooms they're interested in. Developer gets analytics showing which units get the most attention.

Real Estate Agents: Use VR headset at open homes for properties that aren't built yet. Prospective buyers put on the headset, walk through the future apartment. Makes the sale feel more tangible.

Home Builders: Put QR codes in display centers. Visitors scan the code, see different floor plan options on their phone. Take the links home, show family members, make decisions later.

CGI Studios: Offer Enviz experiences as an add-on service to traditional rendering. Charge more for interactive exploration versus static images. Clients value the ability to show their stakeholders an immersive experience.

The Learning Curve

First space: Maybe 30 minutes if you've got your file ready. Upload, wait for processing, test the result.

Understanding all the viewing modes and sharing options: An hour or two of exploration.

Mastering the editor for custom teleport points and dollhouse views: A few projects' worth of practice.

Getting comfortable with the project management and team collaboration features: Depends on your existing workflows, but figure a week or two of regular use.

The help center has step-by-step guides for all the common tasks. Video tutorials show you exactly what to click. Most people report the platform is intuitive enough that they don't need extensive training.

Why Location Matters (Or Doesn't)

Enviz is a Sydney-based company, but the platform is global. Users across Australia, Asia, Europe, North America.

The cloud-based processing means your location doesn't matter. Upload from anywhere, share with anyone.

The multi-language support in software terms is English only, but the visual nature of the platform means language barriers matter less. Someone in Japan can explore a space designed by someone in Australia without needing translation.

Time zones can be a factor for customer support, but the 24-hour response time helps mitigate that.

What You Should Know Before Starting

A few things that will make your experience better:

File Preparation: Clean models convert better. Fix flipped faces, remove unnecessary geometry, organize layers logically.

File Size: Larger, more complex files take longer to process. Plan accordingly if you're on a deadline.

Internet Connection: Uploading large files requires decent bandwidth. Viewing experiences works on moderate connections, but faster is better.

Device Requirements: Any reasonably modern smartphone or tablet works fine. Older devices might struggle with more complex spaces.

Storage Permissions: The mobile app needs permission to store files locally for offline viewing.

The Affiliate and Partner Programs

If you're bringing Enviz to clients or projects, the partner programs are worth knowing about.

Affiliate Program: Share your unique link, earn rewards when others sign up. Straightforward referral setup through their partner portal where you can track earnings.

Partner Program: For professionals who've run Enviz projects and generated at least $1,000 in revenue over the past year. Minimum 10% commission on all conversions and ongoing subscriptions for as long as projects stay active.

Fair use policy: You can't earn commissions on your own projects. They review cases where that appears to be happening.

The Bottom Line

Enviz does one thing really well: turns architectural files into explorable spaces that anyone can access.

If you need to communicate 3D designs to people who aren't trained to read architectural drawings, it works.

If you're selling properties that don't exist yet and need to build buyer confidence, it works.

If your design team is distributed and needs to review work together, it works.

If you want to differentiate your presentations from competitors still using PowerPoint slideshows, it works.

The pricing is structured so you can start small—👉 try your first space with the included discount, use the 14-day free trial, see if it makes sense for your workflow.

The multi-device support means you're not excluding anyone based on their hardware. Phone, tablet, browser, VR headset—all work from the same upload.

The platform isn't trying to be everything to everyone. It's focused on making architectural visualization accessible and practical. For some people, that's exactly what they need.

Whether that's you? Upload a file and find out. The barrier to entry is low enough that testing costs you less than the time you'd spend in a typical client meeting.

And if your first space doesn't work out perfectly, the editing tools and customer support are there to help you fix it. The platform is designed for iteration—try things, adjust, improve.

👉 Get started with Enviz and see what your designs look like when people can actually walk through them.

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