I work in the design department of a large construction company specializing in steel industrial buildings, using Archicad as our main design tool.
A recurring challenge we face is incorporating production line machinery into our floor plans. These are typically provided by clients as DWG files, which we usually import directly into Archicad (drag & drop or as external drawings).
However, in many cases, these DWGs are extremely heavy and overly detailed, to the point where they noticeably slow down navigation and general model performance.
What makes this even more frustrating is that cleaning or simplifying these DWG files beforehand is often not a realistic option. They tend to be highly complex, with multiple nested blocks and dense geometry, and in several cases even AutoCAD struggles to handle them efficiently without lag or instability.
So this raises a few questions:
- Is this simply a hardware limitation, or is Archicad not well-suited to handle this type of CAD data?
- Is there a recommended professional workflow for dealing with such files?
- How do larger firms manage this in real-world BIM environments without sacrificing performance?
At the moment, it feels like either we accept degraded performance or we spend unrealistic amounts of time trying to “fix” client DWGs that were never optimized for this use.
I would really appreciate hearing how others deal with this — especially in industrial or highly technical projects.
Operating system used: Windows 11
[AC27 6020 INT FULL • HP Z1 STATION 12th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-12700 2.10 GHz | 16,0 GB ram • Windows 11 Pro]