Code and standards lookup:
Quible can extract requirements from uploaded codes, regulations, and technical documents, which helps architects avoid wasting time manually checking things like setbacks, heights, parking ratios, accessibility rules, and submission criteria before validation or authority submission. Instead of digging through long documents page by page, you can ask the requirement directly and get to the relevant answer faster.
Plan reading for spatial understanding:
Quible can identify room names, dimensions, and the location of spaces from uploaded plans and drawings, which helps architects review layouts faster and reduces the manual effort of scanning drawings to understand what is where. This is especially useful when trying to quickly understand a floor plate, validate a layout, or check whether key spaces are present and logically arranged.
RFI support from drawing snippets:
Quible can interpret cropped plan snippets and
details, which helps architects understand exactly what part of the design a sub-
consultant is asking about without reopening full drawing sets. This makes RFIs easier to respond to because you can focus on the issue itself rather than spending time locating it first.
Markup interpretation during coordination:
Quible can read marked-up drawings and
visual review snippets, which helps architects understand what was flagged and where action is needed faster during internal reviews and consultant coordination. This can speed up comment resolution by making markups easier to read and quicker to act on.
Clash context from screenshots:
Quible can interpret clash screenshots (with the
right model legend) and marked-up coordination images, which helps teams understand what is clashing, where it is happening, and what it relates to before manually logging it into trackers. This reduces some of the repetitive effort involved in reviewing screenshots and trying to decode the issue before taking action.
Spreadsheet and schedule extraction:
Quible can extract structured information from
uploaded Excel and CSV files, which helps architects and project teams pull things such as area schedules, unit counts, door schedules, and finish data without manually digging through spreadsheets. This makes it much faster to retrieve the exact figure needed during coordination, validation, or design review.
Cross-document project search:
Quible can search across reports, specifications,
schedules, presentations, spreadsheets, and drawings together, which helps architects find project information faster when it is spread across too many disconnected files. Instead of guessing which document contains the answer, you can ask once and retrieve it across the full project knowledge base.
Source-grounded answer verification:
Quible can return answers with citations to the original source documents, which helps architects verify information faster and use the output with more confidence during reviews, coordination, and submission prep. The real value is not just getting an answer quickly, but being able to trace it back to the document it came from.
Knowledge base control by package or discipline:
Quible can narrow answers to the relevant project package, discipline, or code set by allowing irrelevant knowledge bases to be switched off, which helps architects avoid noise and focus only on the material that matters. This is particularly useful when working across multiple consultants, submissions, or document groups at the same time.
Room counting and early area review:
Quible can identify rooms and dimensions from uploaded plans, which helps architects count spaces faster and review area distribution earlier without manually checking every room one by one. This gives you a quicker way to understand how a layout is performing before going deeper into detailed coordination.
