Product Review: Vectorworks Architect 2019

Product Review: Vectorworks Architect 2019

Vectorworks Architect 2019 may not have a “star” new feature but as architect and reviewer John Helm note, it offers “a big bang for your buck.” The update offers a large range of superb improvements to existing workflows with new tech—like the new sculpting site modeling tools which can provide great fun with design.

FALL IS THE TIME OF YEAR when the kids are back in school, the weather changes, it’s cooler outside, gets dark earlier, and we don’t mind so much settling down to work. What better time to have a new package of designer tricks for the software we use or are considering buying to review. This year Vectorworks is there as it has been this time of year for several years with its own full bag of improvements, time savers and added usefulness in Vectorworks 2019. I have been writing a yearly review of Vectorworks for a few years now and since I am an architect I focus mostly on Vectorworks Architect. Also, Vectorworks Architect is a hugely capable program so I can only cover some of the new features that impress me the most.

So here we go with some of my favorites not necessarily in any order, but first:

What is Vectorworks?

Vectorworks is a product line of distinct industry and general CAD products. One of them, Vectorworks Architect, is a BIM tool for the architects and designers, while Vectorworks Landmark is a CAD and BIM tool for landscape architects. Vectorworks Spotlight is a leading and growing CAD tool for stage set and lighting designers in the entertainment industry, and Vectorworks Fundamentals is a general CAD tool for anyone. There is another premium product called Vectorworks Designer which bundles all these industry tools into one package and Vision and Braceworks are supplemental software tools for Spotlight customers, largely.

Vectorworks Architect 2019 is a stand-alone program that supports most, if not all, of an architect’s needs. It will take the architect from design concept through client presentations to final construction documents without having the need for any other programs. It is designed to be intuitive and follows the concept of what you see is what you get. It is designed to be a program that the architect himself can use without having to go back to school or hire specialized BIM designers and drafters.

What makes Vectorworks unique?

What I like about Vectorworks is that while it has an extensive array of BIM-dedicated tools for creating detailed Building Information Models (BIM) it does not limit the designer. That is, an architect can use a combination of the basic 3D modeling tools—and they are very capable—or the basic tools like walls, doors and windows and the designer can go off in any direction.

01 – An elaborate ceiling design in 3D using the flexible modeling and object tools in Vectorworks Architect. (image: John Helm / Architosh. All rights reserved)

Look at the ceiling below that I did some time ago for an interior designer. It uses many of the tools that come standard with Vectorworks without having restrictions imposed by dedicated software. This is one of the most uncommon aspects of Vectorworks Architect as a BIM tool—its unique flexibility.

3D Site Model Sculpting

I’ve never been that good at creating site models, even though Vectorworks has some great tools that make it fairly easy. So, I have often wished I could just sort of sculpt the site model rather than have to work with all those messy contour lines. Now they have made that possible.  You can create a model from contour lines or just start with a flat model. Then push and pull the model up and down as you please to shape the site that fits your design.

02 – Push and pull modeling has come to site modeling in Vectorworks 2019.

This ought to make landscape architects go nuts with pleasure and architects can easily create that mound that hides the ugly parking area. Vectorworks already has Push and Pull modeling, as every leading tool should, but now the company has brought that simplicity and engaging modeling play to landforms.

Symbols in Elevation and Sections

In Vectorworks, you can easily create an elevation or section of your model. But in the past, interior elevations were a bit messy as the sinks, toilets, cabinets, etc. would show up in full detail as would “sections” through doors and windows. That made for a cluttered drawing that was not all that legible. The way around the problem was to “explode” the section and then erase the unwanted detail. But, of course, this eliminated the automatic updating when changes were made to the model.

03 – New powerful view options for Symbols in Vectorworks 2019 will help architects immensely in sectional views in particular.

Now by selecting the amount of detail you want on each symbol, the drawing is clear, uncluttered, and best of all updates along with drawing changes. A big drawback to this is that most symbols will have to be edited in order for the various views to be simplified.

Sections and Elevations

Vectorworks uses section lines to create both sections and elevations. So, an elevation is created by making a section through the model without cutting the building as one would do making an actual section. Several improvements have been made which allow one to show or not show various features either in front of or behind the cut plane. This is controlled mostly by turning on or off various classes.

04 – Vectorworks Architects offers full control over elevations through controlling what you see both in front and behind a cut line, controlled by classes and various settings.

You could, for example, show cars parked in front of the elevation but not anything else, or show the landscaping behind the building leaving out other objects. You can also control line weight, color, line type and fill.

Vectorworks Architect 2019 may not have a “star” new feature but as architect and reviewer John Helm notes, it offers “a big bang for your buck.” The update offers a large range of superb improvements to existing workflows with new tech—like the new sculpting site modeling tools which can provide great fun with design.

VGM — Vectorworks Graphic Module

Speed is the goal when working in 3D as the model can get complicated and put a heavy load on graphics processing.  Improvements in the VGM, without getting into the mechanics of how it works, have accomplished a very nice improvement in how fast the view updates as one zooms in and out or pans around. It’s one of those things you only notice when it’s a problem. That problem is pretty much gone now.

The other big new addition to the VGM, which is Vectorworks’ custom OpenGL rendering engine is that the Sheet Layers are now generated from the VGM technology itself, lending design layer navigation speed to all sheet layer navigation. The point is, 2D navigation is now much faster in Sheet Layers thanks to the VGM being applied to this area of rendering what we see on the screen.

Title Blocks

The title block on any drawing or project set is what ties all the various sheets together so while talking about them may not seem so exciting or on the edge of technology making them easy to create and use is vital to the workflow. Small improvements and fixes have been made for 2019 to title blocks, but the biggest is having the ability to manage title blocks across multiple documents from a single file.

05 – New title block features provide centralized control over title blocks across a project.

In other words, if your project consists of several files you can have one set up for all of them and if an issue date or sheet number, for example, is changed on one file it can automatically update all the other files and sheets from the file where the change is made. Pretty cool and another time saver, not to mention mistake saver.

QR Codes

Vectorworks lets you insert hyperlinks to other sheets, details and even websites.  This feature has been around for a while and works also on exported PDF files. They can be big time savers.  But they aren’t much use out in the field with a printed sheet. Now those hyperlinks can be made into QR Codes which can be easily used in the field, taking you to the site of a manufacturer for more information, installation instructions, photos, even videos. Just use your tablet or smartphone connected to the internet.  I imagine this might save a lot of calls to the architect’s office for clarifications on how to install that item the contractor has never seen before. Might even save a lot of requests for substitutions.

Image Effects

Here is another handy little tool. Wow, can you believe that many or maybe most print shops will now print your “blueprints” in full living color for the same price as the old B&W?  So, we’re talking full-color renderings, right there on the plans, as well as colored lines, textures, hatches and imported photos of existing conditions or manufacturers products. But, sometimes renderings or imported images can lack contrast, be too dark or be a bit off color. In the past the only way to improve a rendered image was to export it to perhaps Photoshop, fix it and import back into Vectorworks. With image effects, you have the basic tools to adjust exposure, contrast highlights, etc. all within the program.  No more back and forth import and export.

BIM Workflow—Design in 3D

At nearly the sketch on a napkin stage, Vectorworks has many tools in 3D modeling that allow a designer to freely express himself; there is no need to use other programs such as Sketchup in the initial design phase. You can sketch freely and then extrude, push/pull, reshape as you like and design anything from a freeform chair to a twisting skyscraper. However, those fancy shapes don’t automatically turn into BIM models. You will have to come back to earth to create walls, roofs and slabs using the dedicated BIM tools, preset objects, and forms. Over the years Vectorworks has pushed to give the BIM tools more liberal modeling freedom. And this continues today. However, a more nimble, new type of object that can interact with BIM object forms in a similar manner as all BIM objects do, would be a useful addition.

Space Planning

The tool has been around for several years.  But now it is incredibly powerful. You can create a matrix of spaces with a numerical number assigned to the relationships between spaces. That is, say the kitchen should be close to the dining room, or the CEO’s bathroom should be attached to his office, whatever is important to the client. Then Vectorworks will create a layout of basic spaces. Or you can create your own spaces by drawing them and changing their shapes at will then define them picking any of the predefined space styles or make your own.

06 – The “spaces” tools in Vectorworks Architect 2019 now supports styles providing users with more visual options control for the display of spaces.

Basically, everything about a “space” can be set from the energy consumption to the paint on the wall and of course the use of the space and its size. There are just too many parameters to mention here.  Once all the spaces are set and organized in the plan, walls are created almost at the push of a button and from there the model goes up. Finish and room schedules can be created automatically. The potential to speed the workflow is amazing, but it will take some study to make full use of it.

Vectorworks Architect 2019 may not have a “star” new feature but as architect and reviewer John Helm notes, it offers “a big bang for your buck.” The update offers a large range of superb improvements to existing workflows with new tech—like the new sculpting site modeling tools which can provide great fun with design.

Data Tags

This is one of the biggest changes this year, and perhaps one of the hardest to get a grip on. Why? Because it is so feature-rich; one needs to spend some time learning how to use it and then setting it up.  It replaces the “number” stamp and the “data” stamp features, with added capabilities, for example, change a start number and all the following numbers change automatically. Tags don’t just give a number or letter to an object but they can contain lots of information about the object. Use it to tag a window and all the information in the window symbol can be listed in an automatic window schedule.

07 – The new Data tags tool is one of the biggest new features in Vectorworks 2019.

Reports can be created for any group of objects one chooses—plumbing fixtures, furniture, whatever. If you chose a mode, say windows it will only let you chose window symbols, click on a door and it won’t allow the tag. Perhaps the big time saver is multi tags, it will select all the windows on a plan and then give all similar windows the same tag and give sequential tags to other windows. Combine that with an automatically generated window schedule and wow, tagging and schedule all done very quickly. If you are working in a BIM environment, reports can be organized to fit into IFC or Cobie formats all done automatically using the tag system, making it efficient to exchange files with designers using other CAD or management programs. Needless to say, none of this automation comes without proper organization by the architect or managers.

What is BIM?

Sometimes it seems a hard concept to grasp because it might describe a simple 3D model of a design idea to a fully integrated building information model that contains just about everything one might need to know about a proposed and even constructed building. Creating a model of a project, the designer is essentially building the building or whatever he is designing virtually. That virtual building can then be studied, dissected and used to produce any manner of information output from drawings to material lists. If errors are found or changes made then all other aspects of the model are updated automatically.  There is no waiting for a process of passing the changes down the line to those who produce the final output. In other words, the designer becomes more integrated into the ongoing flow of the design and construction process. On a practical level find a change that needs to be made and within hours the changes are made and minutes later show up on the construction super’s tablet computer with printed plans delivered shortly thereafter.

BIM and IFC Collaboration

While creating the BIM model is straightforward enough making it useful to others not using Vectorworks requires a pretty strong degree of discipline and organization. You can find a detailed step-by-step list of how to export to IFC in the Vectorworks help file. The project will need to all be in one file which can be an issue for very large projects and also the way some offices split projects into more than one file. If the project is initially set up using stories for each floor the export tool will assign or, that is, map layers to the proper IFC layers.  If not, then layers can be assigned manually.

08 – An image of a project by the author using Vectorworks Architect with its powerful modeling and BIM technologies.

BIM, and subsequently IFC exporting and importing, is most useful when all the objects in a building are identified or mapped to IFC data types and tagged with record information. Vectorworks has all the tools needed to accomplish this. They have made extensive changes to IFC data mapping which give much more control over the IFC export. But there is no avoiding the work required to identify and map data to all the objects in a building. Vectorworks does make this easier by pre-assigning typical data to most common objects. Anything beyond the basic info must be done for each object. It’s all great stuff given that the architect has a client willing to pay for the time it takes.

DWG Export

A big part of collaboration is having to export even simple 2D drawings to others using the DWG format. In the past, this required a bit of work to simplify drawings in order to make the exported file suitable for use by others such as engineers. Through the last few versions, this has gotten easier. This year I find it even better, just export a sheet layer and it all looks nearly just like the original Vectorworks drawing, with one little problem in that sometimes text which is in mirrored symbols does not get mirrored and appears backward.

Working with Revit

Vectorworks has made importing Revit files easier by adding batch import and other improvements that make imported files more compatible with Vectorworks. The main advantage is being able to import batches of manufacture’s product files. It is also working well for the person switching from Revit to Vectorworks. Being able to get a good clean import of an existing project done in Revit is important. It is really too bad that there is still no direct way to export Vectorworks to Revit. Wouldn’t it be nice if Vectorworks and Revit users could work back and forth in a wonderful world of interchangeability?

Architosh will publish a report soon that sheds some light on how such a thing could take place and what will make it possible. The days of painful interoperability look to be waning slowly with each passing year.

PDF Import / Export

PDF pretty much wins the prize as the most used import/export program, so, it is important also to the Vectorworks user. They have made some improvements, I’m talking about snapping to objects and annotations on an imported file. Snapping seems to work well enough and if you have a program that lets you annotate a PDF file you can turn them on or off in the Vectorworks file. If you export a Vectorworks file you can export the layers as individual layers that is cool. The rub is when you import a file with layers. They all get combined into one layer, that’s not cool. Also, it does not have a way to recognize the scale of the imported file. That has to be adjusted by the old scale objects tool, which requires a bit of back and forth. Another thing that seems lacking here is that you can easily import a PDF file that has several pages and the pages are kept separate, but once again they are all on one layer. There should be an option to create separate layers for each page.

On a positive note, PDF import now allows you to toggle on or off the annotations, and this builds on the program’s Bluebeam Studio Prime integrations.

Clip Cubes and Viewports

Viewports in Vectorworks work fundamentally in a similar manner as in other programs. Except that in Vectorworks you gain multiple advantages that come for free due to the added system of classes plus layers which don’t exist in rival software. In AutoCAD, for example, you have just layers. A “viewport” is simply like a photograph of an area of your CAD data that exist on Vectorworks’ design layers. A primary purpose of creating them is to place those viewports on “sheet layers.” This is nearly identical to AutoCAD’s age-old concept of model-space versus paper-space, with the latter being sheet layers.

Interestingly, you can create viewports on design layers, particularly from other files through an external reference process (Xrefs), and you still have the power to create a viewport of the viewport and place that into a sheet layer. Sheet layer viewports can be copied and pasted between other sheet layers because all sheets are at 1:1 scale. Design layers can be any scale, but you can still copy a viewport from one design layer to another design layer, despite scale differences.

09 – Clip Cube sections can now be placed on Sheet Layers as viewports.

The whole process is extensive in the variety of approaches and this flexibility can be used to great use and effect. You can also create viewports of objects in 3D. In fact, if your objects are not in 3D when you originally create the viewport, you can turn them into 3D views once in a sheet layer viewport. This is accomplished through the object info palette. You cannot do the same within design layers however because the layers themselves have X-Y-Z view coordination relative to the computer screen. That is not a real limitation in any form, however.

New Clip Cube Features

These are also very handy. Turn on the Clip Cube tool and then drag the walls of the cube that surrounds your BIM and you only see what is inside the cube. Everything outside of it is cut out. This is cool, you can change views, render or not, fly around and all that stuff. Cut out the building in front of another and see just the one behind. Now the latest feature in 2019 is that the clip cube can be saved as a viewport.  That’s right, cut out the top two stories and the ceiling and you can have a 3D rendered view of the lower floor. Or save a 3D view of the interior of space in just a few seconds. Then put that view on a sheet layer to become part of the presentation or even construction docs. This could be a lot of fun to work with.

Layers and Classes—New Search and Filter

As mentioned earlier, Vectorworks uses two systems for classifying items in the project file. Layers and Classes make organizing your project much easier. As a non-AutoCAD user, I find it confusing when I try to understand what all the layers in a typical DWG file are. In Vectorworks, it is much more intuitive.  There was a time when we would draw on tracing paper, the floor plan on one layer for example then overlay it with another layer of paper to trace and locate for example the electrical layout.

10 – Powerful new layer and class search and filter tools wrangle in files with dozens if not hundreds of layers and classes.

In Vectorworks, we do the same digitally. That is the general floor plan is on a layer, then we might make a layer for the electrical layout and if both layers are on we see them together. But also, the components of each layer are grouped into classes, for example, windows, doors, electrical outlets, lights, etc. The classes can be turned on and off or grayed. So, the general floor plan can have the doors and windows turned off when used to create a structural plan. This year they have introduced class and layer search and filter options. Now you can make just the classes that are in use visible and search for groups say doors for example. You can filter layers so you just see the layers on the second story. Once you get used to using it, it saves time spent scrolling through a long list of layers or classes each time you need to access one.

Conclusion and Recommendations

Every year new features are added and old ones improved. This year there are several that stand out, like the new clip cube to viewports tools and the new data tag features. Hopefully, I have given you a taste of the ones I believe are most useful.  As always, the decision to buy or to upgrade is not easy. I am guessing that the percentage of firms that might make full use of Vectorworks’ BIM capabilities is still relatively smaller but growing each year as new BIM features add more power and capability.

Vectorworks Architect 2019 gives you a big bang for the buck. That has always been one of its strongest competitive advantages. It also has perpetual licensing and there is no trend to force users into yearly subscriptions. It is easy to learn and can be used for anything from 2D drafting to full on BIM. For the upgrader, it is improved capabilities and time/cost savings that make the upgrade worth the price. From a time-savings cost analysis perspective, the tools that will be most used that make it worth it is Data Tags, 2D components for hybrid objects, Class and Layer Filtering, Clip Cube Viewports, Space Planning, Site Model Sculpting, and Image Editing. Well, that is a pretty decent list and there are many more improvements that I have not mentioned.

Pros: Vectorworks Architect 2019 is solid upgrade with numerous new time-saving features, like its new Data Tag tools, application of VGM technology to sheet layers for faster panning and zooming, and Clip Cube viewport option. The new image effects tools mean users can stop using Photoshop for post-processing and visual manipulation of images. Interoperability has been improved with support for IFC data mapping, offering users flexible advanced capabilities, plus improved Revit integration (batch import capability), plus improvements to PDF use.

Cons: CineRender is still the only rendering engine that supports high-end visualization in Vectorworks 2019, so integration with other rendering engines and the new breed of interactive-renderers (Lumion, Twinmotion, etc) is missing. The company may also want to start looking at Epic and Unity’s high-level of recent partnering with Vectorworks BIM competitors for offering more advanced interactive authoring.

Advice: Vectorworks 2019’s new application of the VGM to Sheet Layers may be enough to entice upgrades for users working with large, complicated files with tons of sheets. The speed-up is very dramatic and highly time-saving. Architects and landscape design professionals doing lots of site modeling will love the new site modeling sculpting tools. This is a very solid upgrade with no single “oh wow” feature but instead many superb improvements to existing features or new technologies for existing workflows.

by John Helm, Architect

Source: architosh.com