While even mentioning AR tends to conjure images of complex 3D animations springing up from the kitchen table, one of the most professional augmented reality apps currently available for interior design performs a far less grand, yet nonetheless vital function.
Measure: Aimed at design professionals, Measure is Google’s AR app that enables measuring and mapping of interior design spaces (in readiness for CAD design) with just a few taps of a smartphone.
While Measure uses low-level AR, other interior design apps stretch the technology’s capabilities somewhat further. If you’ve read our other articles on augmented reality, you’ll be familiar with our love for Place, IKEA’s interior furnishing app, which uses AR to allow users to virtually place 3D models of furniture in their homes.
IKEA Place: The Place app shares some characteristics with Measure: it uses AR to actually measure and map the space where the furniture is placed. This allows the 3D furniture to be scaled to the dimensions of the room, meaning that when you squeeze a virtual easy chair into an alcove and it fits, the same will be true of the real chair.
IKEA claims that the Place app, developed using Apple’s ARKit SDK, renders scaled-down furniture at an accuracy of 98%. In other words, rather than simply being an app that makes you want IKEA furniture in your home, it really helps solve practical interior design problems. This truly is one of the better augmented reality home design apps.
Hutch: One of the most sophisticated AR interior design apps is Hutch, effectively a complete augmented reality app interior design service. Users can take a photo of a room, try out different looks using style filters, then submit the finished image for virtual design. The finished design—complete with white-label furniture and products available through the app—is returned to the user within an hour.