Downstream Workbench
Mockup physical sku

House Portrait

A framed axonometric portrait of the actual home, generated from the scan geometry and sold as a digital or physical keepsake.

Layers
3
Annotations
82
Stories
3
RBR room modelSpatial alignmentInstallation notesCaptured objects

Annotated spatial layer

Actual scan, mapped notes, and captured fixtures

X/Z placement is aligned to the RBR-local frame. Vertical marker height is deliberately shown as a floor-band placeholder until per-floor ARKit Y offsets are resolved.

3D inspection

Room evidence map

Ground floor · 29 annotations · 54 components

Layer register

22

Inspection and condition notes

Room-backed RBR notes with inspection photos where available.

RBR room model

12

Installation notes

Heat, hot-water, control, and building-element notes from the scan session.

Installation notes

48

Captured fixtures and objects

RoomPlan object detections shown as horizontal footprints in the scan.

Captured objects

Story coverage

Basement

6 findings / 4 installations / 15 objects

25

Ground floor

8 findings / 2 installations / 19 objects

29

First floor

8 findings / 6 installations / 14 objects

28

House Portrait is the consumer-facing opposite of a compliance report. The same scan that supports energy and risk analysis becomes a polished object the homeowner can recognise immediately.

The workbench can derive the composition from the canonical spatial scene package, choose a stable camera angle, and use the material mapping to keep the portrait grounded in the actual home rather than a generic house template.

The route to production is deliberately narrow: one strong axonometric render, one digital SKU, and one framed SKU. That keeps the first version shippable while leaving room for later style variants.