
When the Nemetschek BlueBeam group construction document management platform acquired AI firmus on September 4, he said that the German -based software company had great plans for artificial intelligence in document construction based on documents.
The latest version of BlueBeam Revu Max Sotware will be released in the first quarter of 2026 and integrates the AI in shipments, RFIs and other processes for PDF -based tool -based tool users, Nametschek said at the BlueBeam without Limits Conference in Washington, DC, September 30 to October 30.
He also said that a “sewing” function, joining in various sheets for large civil projects, would be included through firmus technology to connect various sections of so large projects, designed by hundreds of sheets, together in a general 2D view. B
Bluebeam also shared details of his model context protocol, the file exchange protocol that allows interoperability between AI and AI applications Formats of data of Commercial tools widely used. The event also detailed a new integration of process without a separate login and an integration of docusign that takes less clicks to sign and approve documents.
“Revu to be ready is the one that is what [Model Context Protocol] The integration is for, “said Don Jacob, director of innovation in Bluebeam. It” is really the first horse’s horse that seems to be really winning traction. We want to support this basic interoperability. “
As a PDF -based tool, Bluebeam Revu has always occupied a unique place in construction flows, as the Adobe file format translates the role in digital deliveries and maintains the ability to sign, seal and perform other aspects of paper -based processes that design and construction depend on the flow of work and management of legal risk.
Although companies like Motif, Arc and now, even Autodesk with the design of the building, are committed to the future of design tools based on browser with AGE Agents who help the design and construction process, Bluebeam fills out the space that paper documents made once and plans to add functionality to these flows of work.
The Magic BlueBeam wand is a tool that can turn flat 2D geometry into volumes or quantities, or even double geometry and compensate for it, with a surprisingly 3D design functionality integrated into a PDF platform. Jacob de Bluebeam and his product chief Luke Prescott said that adding and to Revu Max will be done in a similar way.
“Civil and horizontal use cases and be able to make translations and conversions, are absolutely why having to manually calculate this, I think it is where the potential opens to automate all this,” said Jacob. “Being able to see the global project in Stitch is an example of this, being able to see different opinions of this PDF is this common language for a project. Over time, more and more data are available. I think it is definitely a direction we go, different ways of viewing the project data.”
Procore integration will only require a login to Bluebeam Revu Max, which Jacob and Prescott said that they will work a lot like integration of Bluebeam Revu with Microsoft Sharepoint. Will be available at all subscription levels at no additional cost. The magical wand geometry capabilities will be included with Bluebeam Revu Max and will allow users to convert any marking with geometry into polygons, convert areas into a drawing into measures of quantity or volume and duplicated areas. A new revit complement was created to allow users to create spaces through a BlueBeam PDF plan and combine them with a 3D revit model.
At the conference, Nametschek announced an association between the Stanford University of integration engineering center to accelerate the innovation driven by AI-
“Bluebeam shopping in 2014 was one of the best decisions in the history of our company,” said Georg Nametschek, the 91 -year -old founder of the company, told attendees to announce Stanford’s collaboration. “After acquisition, [Richard] Lee, the founder of Bluebeam, asked me which of the many companies we had acquired, I thought it was the best. Today I would say Bluebeam. “
