A company that saw the potential in the iPad as a tool for work, not just play, is PlanGrid, a construction management software application that’s like a Google Docs for blueprints. But getting the ...
The team at Drofika is pleased to announce that they have partnered with PlanGrid, the leader in construction productivity software. Available today, Drofika users can upload imagery and analysis from ...
SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 26, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- OpenSpace, the leader in AI-enabled 360-degree job site documentation, today announced it has partnered with PlanGrid, recently acquired by Autodesk and a ...
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 16, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- PlanGrid, the leader in construction productivity software, today announced two significant new products; Submittals — an easy way to manage and ...
Dronomy, a software company focused on building knowledge into construction, today announced it has integrated with PlanGrid, the leader in construction productivity software. Together, general ...
Two popular tools for collecting project data, BuildingConnected and PlanGrid, previously operated in their own silos. Both companies were acquired by by San Rafael, Calif.-based Autodesk in the last ...
PlanGrid, an Autodesk company and a leader in construction productivity software, today introduced PlanGrid BIM, a powerful new product integration with Autodesk Revit Ⓡ that enables users to ...
SAN FRANCISCO, April 23, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- PlanGrid , an Autodesk company and a leader in construction productivity software, today introduced PlanGrid BIM , a powerful new product integration with ...
One of the construction industry's most widely-used mobile technologies makes critical data accessible in the field with first major Autodesk integration after acquisition San Francisco, CA ...
SAN RAFAEL, Calif., Dec. 20, 2018 /PRNewswire/ — Autodesk, Inc. (NASDAQ: ADSK) has completed the acquisition of PlanGrid, a leading provider of construction productivity software, for $875 million net ...
Why would anyone with a mortgage and family leave a stable job at a big company to go work for a start-up that has a less than 1% chance of surviving for more than a few years? It sounds like a wildly ...