AI, VR, and Live technologies to be utilised by architects, Home space visual appeal
AI, VR, and Live: How Rapidly-Evolving Technologies Could be Utilised by Architects
31 March 2025
The fundamentals of architecture rarely change. What you could learn in the best architectural publications a decade ago will likely hold up in most ways today. However, the ways in which architects can go about applying those fundamentals and how architects deliver their end products and visions to customers are always changing. Right now, we’re in the midst of an incredible surge of technological applications across the board.
We’ve seen colossal tech companies unveil, demonstrate, and even release for free their latest advancements that have the power to change just about everything that we do in some way. Already, the tech that’s surging to prominence is being applied by some architects in different ways, but there’s plenty of room for growth and for taking advantage of the tech more so. These are the tech applications paving the path to the future today.
Analysing Masses of Data to Provide Design Solutions
Artificial intelligence has been a captivating subject in technology circles for years. You can look back to the May 2019 major exhibition by Tonkin Liu entitled AI: More than Human shows the technology has developing in recent years. It was on 30 November 2022, however, that AI truly hit the mainstream as a usable bit of tech. That was when ChatGPT was launched to the public by OpenAI.
On 10 January 2025, the race escalated again, shocking the world and our perceptions of how far AI can go. In less than a few years since ChatGPT went live, the DeepSeek-R1 chatbot showcased just how much cheaper and accessible the tech can be. Now, we’ve got plenty of applications of AI to make use of, including as a form of big data analytic tool to provide design solutions.
As AI can swiftly analyse huge amounts of data, architects can ask chatbot-style programs questions as to the best materials to use or approaches to take. AI with an architect could help in key decisions for the best materials to use and offer advice based on stacks of weather data as to which materials will be the most viable.
In China, tools like XKool are already being adopted by many architects to generate master plan layouts, generate interiors, and to hit space standards. It’s said to still give rather robotic results, but creativity is something that humans need to handle.
Immersing Yourself and the Client in the Designs
Taking a project from vision to reality is central to the architect’s process, and has even put on show at events like the LAVA Exhibition. However, showing how that journey plays out hasn’t always been easy.
There are new desires for architects to be able to showcase what’s to come ahead of time and allow clients to become immersed within this. Naturally, this would ease the process for customers and even help the architectural process itself. Down the line, this could involve merging two important technologies.
The first is live streaming, with live streaming is now utilised across various industries and generating billions of hours of viewing content online. In its most advanced state, live streaming even lets people participate in events in real time. For example, with additional tech, like optical character recognition and a game control unit, the iGaming sector has famously utilised live streaming in the creation of live casinos. These allow people can play table games and game shows in real-time, with real live-dealers. In Live Lightning Roulette and Live Ultimate Texas Hold’em online players are able to see the results and the payouts all as they happen.
This kind of immersive and interactive live streaming technology could be used within the industry to showcase plans before completion.
It could then be taken further with virtual reality technology. With virtual reality and live virtual reality technology, architects could create digital 3D twins in the metaverse and then guide guests around in-person. Equally, live streaming technology could be used to give a real time view of the construction process for customers to check out online. Whether it’s a live stream or a traversable 3D model, having these immersive options ready to use would greatly enhance the experience.
Artificial intelligence, live streaming, and virtual realities can become integral parts of the whole architectural process over the coming years, from AI helping with plans to live VR making the visualisation process all the more useful.
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