I was able to get a point cloud of a manufacturing plant interior from Trimble to work with and tried importing it into ArchiCAD in several ways.
I used a demo of Trimble's Realworks software to convert the point cloud into various formats and used it to create a 3D model to export.
When importing the point cloud as an XYZ file into ArchiCAD, it took several hours and never fully completed, even after leaving it to run overnight. I could see it add many, many hotspots, which were placed in a Doppler radar fashion. It would eventually just stay in spinning cursor mode. I could cancel that and flip into the 3D window and nothing was there. Pretty much what I expected.
The DWG and DGN formats didn't produce anything either, and most disappointing, the 3D model I created in Realworks didn't have an export format that ArchiCAD could import. This may change in the future.
Considering I only tried the one example from one manufacturer, it's possible that Leica, Faro, and others may have an exportable 3d format that ArchiCAD likes. However, my experience was that until a point cloud is able to be imported raw directly into ArchiCAD and converted to walls/slabs/parts within AC, the point cloud and it's related software package would primarily be useful as a reference for pulling dimensions, since you would ultimately be doubling your modeling effort creating a surface model in the point cloud software and then again in ArchiCAD to convert everything to parametric parts.
It definitely has some very nice advantages such as quick and accurate field measuring as well as the ability to refer to the scan for a dimension that was missed, eliminating a trip to the site. But for the price, it still appears to be a bit out of sight for what it offers.
If anyone else has had any success importing from a laser scanning system, I'd be interested in hearing about it.
Thanks!
Mike
AC 6-27 - Intel i9-9900K - RTX3090 - Windows 11 - 64GB RAM