Architectural practice
without the compromise.
Comparisons
Pick the closest match, each comparison covers feature parity, the gaps Synaps will not pretend to fill, and a migration path that does not pause a live job.
Why teams switch
Plans, sections, details, and a live sheet index treated as the deliverable, not a side-effect of a model.
Elevations and sections stay tied to source geometry across edits. No "republish everything" afternoons.
Office libraries with publish/edit/view roles. Manufacturer objects that survive contact with a real job.
Pilot path
Bring one active project with a real sheet set. If Synaps does not shorten the path to issued PDFs in two weeks, wait, regardless of how this page reads.
Migrate one library slice. Name the sheet set you will own in Synaps.
Move internal review to Synaps. Keep your incumbent as archive.
Issue one PDF set. Measure hours from plan edit to confident re-export.
Synaps is most commonly compared against Revit, AutoCAD, SketchUp, Archicad, Vectorworks, and BricsCAD. The honest answer differs by stack, pick the closest match above for a side-by-side.
Yes, that is the common mixed stack. Your incumbent stays the archive (and federated BIM if applicable); Synaps owns drafting, libraries, and issued sets.
Pilot on one sheet set inside an active job, not a greenfield test. Real geometry and real export pressure surface fit faster than a sandbox.
Each detail page above has a side-by-side. We do not ship a 200-row matrix, comparison theatre favours the longest checklist, not the team with the shortest path to an issued set.
A studio lead plus the editor who owns exports. They need authority to change one sheet set without pausing the job on site.