Property report
A one-shot deep dive on a plot you own — lokalplan, terrain, sun, neighbours.
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BIM for everyone. Sketch the building you want, the way you would on paper. Lokalplan, terrain, sun, neighbours — handled.
Sketch the building you want, the way you would on paper.
Lokalplan, terrain, sun, neighbours — handled.
Open in your browser. No install, no setup.
You talk. Ginnung drafts. You shape it.
Type an address. Ginnung pulls what's on file — the parcel, footprints, terrain, planning rules — and renders the site, the ground, and the neighbours in 3D before you've written a sentence.
"A two-storey house, 160 m², gable roof, south-facing deck." Or upload a sketch. Ginnung hands the brief to Gróa, our generation agent, who writes Lite-STEP and compiles it to a real IFC 4.3 model you can inspect, edit, and export.
Edit elements directly in the canvas. Ask for changes in chat. The model lives at LOD 100–200 today — site, massing, generic elements — the right fidelity for early decisions, planning checks, and conversations with the people who decide.
Site context that used to mean a week of records-pulling and three plug-ins is already there when you arrive. You design. We watch the ground.
Setbacks, height limits, roof angles, allowed materials. Where we have local plans indexed, Ginnung reads them and flags anything you're about to draw that wouldn't pass review. Coverage grows region by region.
Your site is fetched at the highest resolution we can find for the location. Foundations sit on actual contours. Cut-and-fill is calculated as you draw. No more "we'll figure it out on site."
Adjacent buildings load in 3D from public parcel data and OpenStreetMap. See sight lines, shading, and scale at a glance. Your design lives in its actual context, not a blank canvas.
Most CAD tools were optimised for humans clicking. Lite-STEP was optimised for LLMs writing — Python syntax, integer millimetres, mnemonic IDs, construction-noun primitives that map directly to IFC 4.3. It's how Gróa produces buildings reliably from a sentence, and it's the layer your model lives in.
A four-storey apartment block — foundation, slabs, walls, 32 windows, an entry door, a roof — fits in 35 lines that compile straight to IFC 4.3. No GUI clicks, no imperative state, no hand-holding the geometry.
Six design principles derived from empirical testing of LLM code generation: integer-only coordinates, mnemonic identifiers, Python syntax, construction-noun primitives, Three.js / glTF conventions, full IFC 4.3 coverage. Every choice cuts a class of agent error.
Use Lite-STEP inside Ginnung, or bring your own runtime — the DSL stands alone. The parser, the compiler, and the primitive library are open. The agentic layer that sits on top is what we sell. lite-step.org →
Start from a plot you own and get a full report, sketch a building from a blank scene — or just open a new project and begin.
A one-shot deep dive on a plot you own — lokalplan, terrain, sun, neighbours.
Learn moreSketch a building from a blank scene — describe it, Gróa drafts it, you shape it.
Learn moreOpen a new project — describe the building you want, Gróa drafts it, you shape it. Nothing to set up.
No invented quotes. Just the people the tool is built for.
You're thinking about an extension or a new build. You want to know what your local rules will let you do, before you commit. Type your address, describe the idea, see what flags. Take it to the next conversation already drawn.
You spend the first week of every project assembling site context — terrain, neighbours, planning rules, sun. Ginnung loads it in seconds and lets you start massing immediately. Hand off to your full BIM stack via IFC when the heavy detailing starts.
You answer the same planning questions every week. Ginnung renders them as a model the citizen can read, on the actual plot, with the actual rules. Conversations get faster when everyone is looking at the same thing.
No, and not trying to be. Ginnung covers early-stage work: massing, regulation checks, client conversations, planning applications. For 4,000-page construction documentation you keep your existing BIM stack — and we hand off via IFC 4.3, the open standard, so the model travels with you.
No. Ginnung runs in your browser — Chrome, Safari, Edge, Firefox. Your projects live with us encrypted; you can export at any time.
Your projects are yours. We store what's needed to deliver the service and nothing else. We don't train models on your designs. Details in Privacy, data, and terms.
Address geocoding, terrain, sun, and neighbour context work anywhere with public data — that's most of the planet. Local planning rules ship region by region as we index them. Tell us where you're building and we'll prioritise.
LOD 100–200 today — site, massing, generic elements. That's the right fidelity for feasibility, planning checks, daylight and shadow, and early conversations. Higher LOD is on the roadmap.
Yes. The beta is free. After GA we'll have a free tier for personal projects and paid tiers for studios and pros. No credit card to start.
Lite-STEP — the Python DSL Gróa writes — is open source: parser, compiler, primitive library, and IFC 4.3 mapping. The agentic layer (Ginnung, Gróa) and the parts that touch user data stay closed. More on what's open and how to contribute on the Lite-STEP roadmap.
A small team in Copenhagen — architects, engineers, and BIM nerds who got tired of CAD that pretends users are stupid and tools that pretend planning doesn't exist. So we built one that doesn't.
No install. No credit card. Type your address, describe what you want, and watch.