Autodesk transportation infrastructure solutions provides civil engineers with intelligent, connected BIM (Building Information Modeling) workflows to help make infrastructure projects more resilient, productive, and profitable.
Our tools enable engineers to create high-quality, flexible designs incorporating road, land, and other civil data. Using our automated production techniques, teams can produce and share project documentation such as road details, grading, bridge details, or visualizations.
By harnessing Autodesk's complete AEC software collection, teams can better manage the complexity of unique infrastructure projects and develop custom components to satisfy stakeholder requirements.
The exemplary work carried out by the Autodesk application design engineers team has enabled the attainment of this significant milestone in workflow improvement. Civil 3D users are now benefiting from the latest advanced feature updates, essential for efficiently completing their daily design tasks and routine work. Congratulations are in order for all the teams involved in making this achievement possible. The demonstration work conducted was highly professional and effectively addressed the topic at hand. Each new feature was thoroughly explained in detail. Thank you.
This tool is great I can use it properly if the Turnout Creation tool does not allow me to create turnouts as I want to. Having dimension B depending on dimension A does not make sense in the Canadian Railway industry.
Massive power! A nice demo would be setting up a one-person band patch, with some layers and splits. Groove/bass/pad/lead. Awesome for jamming and writing. Unify has more power and control features than something like VPS Avenger.
Hello! I am someone who made a comment about desiring CSV export options during AU 2023 so I am super stoked to see it being added! This is a great start, and my feedback is from the perspective of a C3D user trying to bring in scan data for topographic surveys. Ideally some formatting options when exporting to CSV would be great as it is basically all or nothing which means you are forced to delete the unnecessary information out for C3D import. I also noticed that it exports out the information in PENZ format and as we use PNEZ we will always be forced to swap the northing and easting. For point extraction I wonder if just a generic extraction option would be sufficient as I just need to be able to attach a feature code to a point and then extract it out in a PNEZD format as this allows the Description Key Set to handle everything else when I bring it into CAD. Maybe other industries use this information differently, but for me I've just picked a random feature, defined the feature code I want, and then exported it. Being able to identify the desired point number within ReCap would be great as well, but not a huge issue. The linework extraction feature works pretty well because this now allows us to take the points through a survey database that will create the linework you pulled and layer it properly for you rather than bringing in feature lines that you must manually layer. As stated above it is in a similar boat of needing to delete excess info due to no formatting options. The other issue is that it does not have an option to define linework codes. When coding in the field a surveyor will use beginning/end/curve codes to define the linework so, for our company, a gutter line would start with GU B and then code the remainder of the line as GU until reaching the end and then finish it with GU E. The option to be able to define these before export would save some time of having to manually add them in after exporting, which will get cumbersome on a large site. Awesome addition though!
La mejor y única obra maestra de México del futuro lamentablemente que USA manipulara a López Obrador para cancelarla ,es muy indignante que decepción de disque presidente 😔
E pensar que esse caso podia ter acontecido no Brasil. Uma pena que funções importantes no governo sejam ocupadas por indicados de políticos e não por técnicos especialistas.
Very Underwhelming, considering the multiple thousands of dollars our firm and firms like our fork out for this software each year. I hope the developers are proud. It must be an easier gig than government work.
Considering the constant pressures of penny pinching and showing profits of public companies, the very pressures that actually lead to this subscription model being forced on us by these software companies, I doubt very much working for any of these outfits is a real easy gig.
Ah, where do I even begin with Civil 3D? Let's start with the fact that absolutely nobody was clamouring for the mind-bending, earth-shattering features that Autodesk has graciously bestowed upon us in this latest instalment. Let's not forget about the "Random Crashes" feature. Because, really, who wants to get through a project without experiencing the heart-pounding thrill of uncertainty every time you hit that save button? It's like playing Russian roulette with your design files. Will it crash this time? Roll the dice and find out! Oh, and don't even get me started on the "Auto-Delete" function. Say goodbye to all that pesky work you've been slaving over. With just one click, Civil 3D will happily obliterate everything you've done, leaving you with a blank canvas and a profound sense of existential despair. It's like having a helpful little gremlin living inside your computer, just waiting to sabotage your progress. But fear not, dear users. Along with these completely unnecessary and utterly perplexing features, Civil 3D also comes with the same old bugs and glitches you've come to know and love. Why fix what isn't broken, right? In conclusion, if you're looking for a software experience that will leave you scratching your head in confusion and questioning your life choices, then Civil 3D is the one for you. Just don't say we didn't warn you. On a serious note, I switched to Open Roads Designer long ago, and I haven't looked back. It's like stepping out of the Stone Age and into the 21st century of digital design. Frankly, it's time for Autodesk to abandon this relic of a platform they call Civil 3D and start from scratch. We need something more suited to the demands of modern digital design methods. Until then, I'll be happily cruising down the digital highway with Open Roads Designer, leaving Civil 3D in the dust.