Partial update, in case anyone finds this thread...'
I missed Alex's reply somehow. Excellent to have the product manager appear here so quickly in the conversation!
I bit the bullet and purchased the Structure Sensor and have done some room scans using the scan-to-cad service this week after receiving some excellent support from Alex via Occipital forum, email and phone.
My first scans were returned today and are a mix of high value awesomeness and less than ideal accuracy. Will talk more about it later with some screenshots as I have not had sufficient time do a full accuracy check. (I've seen mostly +/- 0.5% to 1.5% error , but with some 3.5% and even 20% error that I'll talk with Alex about.) This technology cannot be 100% accurate - it's not a $25,000 laser point cloud, so stretching / adjusting is required if a precise as-built is required, which I do want in my case. But it is close enough for well-detailed context if the geometry is adjacent to a tenant-improvement area, specific remodel/renovation area/etc. In the case of context modeling, the imported SketchUp may well be good enough as-is if accurate sections showing building materials aren't needed (etc). Otherwise, ARCHICAD walls would need to be magic-wanded to the imported Morph geometry, and ARCHICAD doors/windows inserted - but the SketchUp-morph will give plan/section/elevation snap points to position those doors/windows quickly for subsequent fine-tuning.
It was pretty awesome that the SketchUp files that were returned to me even modeled cabinetry, some furniture, some complicated trim details and crown moulding.
Equally awesome is the textured mesh that is returned. The scanned mesh is sent to Occipital directly from the iPad app - and upon completion, the scan thumbnails in-app are updated with an icon to let you know the results are ready to download. In-app, you can switch between the original mesh and the cloud-corrected mesh, and also a view that has the full color imagery of the room baked onto the mesh. Measurements can be taken in-app by tapping.
The same photographically textured mesh is available in the computer download zip and can be viewed in the free meshlab app, for a similar virtual reality experience and measurement. The meshlab results are somewhat more cool looking because of screensize, backplane clipping, and the ability to adjust surface lighting. Screenshots to come, eventually.
The computer download zip also contains the SKP file as well as DAE and 2D DWG.
The mesh with baked photographic textures can't be brought into ARCHICAD though - way too many polygons. So, we can't get that kind of 3D context for modeling. But, the SketchUp model works reasonably well. Converting the object to Morphs (one click) then lets you move groups into separate layers/etc.
So far, and considering US labor rates for doing all of this manually, Canvas and the Structure Sensor are looking to me like a reasonable aid in modeling as-builts, or at least renovation / tenant--improvement context. You will need a newer IOS device though. I used a 2017 iPad Pro which has 4 GB of internal memory (the size of the media storage - all that Apple advertises - is not relevant)... and generally consumed more than half of that per room scan (as seen by a progress bar during scanning), and actually ran out of memory on a huge (28' x 32') room, so wouldn't recommend a device with less memory to this community.
Karl
One of the forum moderators
AC 28 USA and earlier • macOS Sonoma 14.7.1, MacBook Pro M2 Max 12CPU/30GPU cores, 32GB