There is some free software in this area, such as ESP-r which does 2D thermal calcs (but I've found it hard to even build, never mind use). I have a selection of evil spreadsheets that need turning into real software for structural calcs, heating design, energy efficiency and thermal analysis. The whole area is wide-open for some commoditisation, and I'd be very keen to get together with other like-minded souls to make something happen. There are lots of sums that needs doing, many of them very easy which could be integrated into some Building Information Management software, with an online database of products, and using CAD tools to draw up shapes and layouts. The building-design area is desperately in need of a good dose of free-software. But again sketchup is proprietary software that can only be run on linux using wine (and I can't get the new version going at all) and the format is proprietary too (SFAIK), so that's no good. It has issues too, but for many tasks it's brilliant, and the cloud-sourcing of subcomponents is a really useful concept. Something with the user interface from sketchup would be great for most people. brlCAD was just too scary and complicated - it may be _really_ good, but again probably only in 1980's kind of way. I did try doing CAD in blender, but it was pretty painful as blender was never really designed as a CAD tool. Of course what we really want is 3D CAD so you can't accidentally make a building where the plan doesn't match up with the elevations. Needs a little more love then it can be uploaded. I have no idea hard it would be to get libreCAD to read DWGs, but I hope someone gets enthused to do that work soon. QCAD/libreCAD using libreDWG would be extremely useful, because it's true that a lot of manufacturer-provided drawings are now DWG-only. The problem is that nothing uses the library, so it is of limited use on its own. The article says that LibreDWG is a long way from a release, but my experience is that's it actually works quite well for reading DWG files. It's a pity that Ribbbonsoft didn't find opening up their code to provide enough benefit to keep doing it. I am now a QCAD expert, and whilst it's a very solid program, it is old-fashioned 2D vector CAD with some annoying features. I've been doing a lot of CAD recently, and it's fair to say that one makes life hard for oneself by doing it on Linux, and with free software.
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