How to use domestic large models for architectural design and urban planning?

In architectural design and urban planning, domestic large models typically support the entire workflow through data integration, scheme generation, and optimization, playing a key role in demand analysis, scheme iteration, and resource evaluation. Demand analysis: Integrate multi-source data such as regional population, climate, and transportation to quickly generate design constraints suitable for local conditions, such as sunlight spacing and floor area ratio suggestions, reducing the time for manual data sorting. Scheme generation: Automatically generate multiple architectural form schemes based on site conditions, support parametric adjustments (such as floor height, facade materials), and simultaneously output preliminary evaluation results such as energy consumption simulation and structural stability. Resource evaluation: Optimize urban road network layout in combination with GIS data, simulate indicators such as traffic flow, green space coverage, and accessibility of public facilities under different planning schemes to assist in sustainable decision-making. In practical applications, priority can be given to domestic large models that support local data access (such as adapting to CAD and BIM formats), and applied in stages—using the model to complete basic analysis in the early stage, and focusing on scheme detail optimization in the later stage to improve design efficiency and scientificity.


