- The Leica Geosystems BLK360 weighs a mere 2.2 lbs (1 kg), is incredibly small 6.5 x 4 inches and lists for US$16,000. It is a full laser scanner and imager, capturing 360,000 points/second with a range of 0.6 - 60 meters. The scanner can be attached to a Microsoft Surface Pro tablet to visualize what you have scanned. Up to 16 of these can be used at the same time.
- Dot Product DPI-8 and DPI-8X (short range) are multi-sensor devices (IR laser and photo cameras). Targeted at professionals, especially in the engineering and construction sector, the devices incorporate SLAM technology and works with Android handhelds. All the processing is done locally on the handheld - no cloud processing is required.
- The Faro Freestyle can scan objects within a range of half a meter to 3 meters away with a resolution of better than 1.5mm with a image point density of up to 45,000 points/m² at 0.5m and up to 10,500 points/m² at 1m. The scanner is attached to a Microsoft Surface Pro tablet for visualizing the point cloud as you scan.
For rapid site documentation, Matterport allows you to scan a floor of a building in an hour or less, upload the captured data to the cloud (Amazon Web Services) and a couple of hours later have a fully-rendered 3D walk-through that can be accessed over the web. It was originally targeted on the real estate sector but recently has been showing up at construction industry and other events including the recent BIMForum in Las Vegas. It provides a
dollhouse view to see a whole floor at once, an inside view for walk-throughs, and a floor plan view for a traditional top-down perspective. It relies on IR and photo cameras and multiple scans in each room - scanning every 1.5 to 2.5 meters. It is capable of rough measurement, but not for engineering or construction purposes. Its biggest advantages are the speed with which you can scan a site and the small size of the resulting file which has to be uploaded to Matterport's cloud site. In addition to real estate and construction site documentation, it is used by FM professionals who need a 3D context for facilities management. For example, it can provide a mechanical room walk through with tags on different pieces of equipment and a way of directing anyone to any location in the facility. The camera is several thousand dollars and cloud processing requires a subscription.
The most recent additions to the technologies that can be used to document a construction site are Cupix and Holobuilder which lower the bar by only requiring a consumer grade 360° camera such as a Ricoh Theta. In the case of Cupix cloud processing requires a subscription. Similarly to the Matterport, you walk through the site capturing images with 360° camera as you go. The resulting images are uploaded to the Cupix site and the result is 3d tours or walk-throughs accessible over the web.
You can compare 3D tours taken on different days to monitor construction progress, compare a 3D walk-through with a BIM model (Revit or IFC) you have uploaded, and measure dimensions with a precision of 1% or better at 20 meters. To reach this level of precision in measurement requires including a marker when taking pictures. Alternatively if a dimension is known it can be used to scale the entire walk-through. Cupix can use images captured indoors and outdoors. Cupix says that if GPS metadata is available from the photos, they can georeference the walk-throughs and generate a KML file. I used Cupix with a low cost 360Fly4K camera and a Samsung Note 5 phone to capture the interior and a bit outside of a cabin in a nearby park. It took a couple of attempts to get the correct spacing between camera placements in capturing 360° images, but after that it was straightforward. I uploaded a rough picture of a floor plan and I was able to walk-through the resulting 3D tour using the Cupix web viewer. Without doing anything additional I was able to get rough measurements accurate to about 5%. Cupix only requires a consumer grade 360° camera. A subscription is necessary for cloud processing. Cupix is targeting a broad market including travel and hospitality, real estate, and arts and culture in addition to the AEC industry 
I just came across HoloBuilder at the recent BIMForum in Las Vegas. Like Cupix it only requires a consumer 360° camera. At first glance it appears to be focused on the AEC industry and makes creating and managing 3D tours of construction sites very easy. It offers 360° SiteStream which is a unique live streaming solution for real-time construction progress monitoring in 3D that runs as a plug-in app on the Ricoh Theta V.
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