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Built for construction estimators

Read Any Plan Set in Minutes, Not Hours.

Upload your PDF plan package and ask plain-English questions. Foreman AI has read every sheet — architectural, structural, civil, and MEP — and can answer anything about scope, specs, conflicts, and quantities before you start counting.

No sign-up required to try. Upload a PDF and start asking questions in 60 seconds.

Estimators spend half their bid time just reading plans.

And the other half hoping they didn't miss anything.

200-page plan sets, 48-hour deadlines

You physically can't read every sheet before a bid is due. Something gets skimmed. Scope gaps become change orders.

Multi-discipline conflicts cost real money

The structural drawings say one thing. The architectural says another. Neither engineer flagged it. You find out at the field when it's a $40K RFI.

Specs are buried and nobody reads them

Division 03–33 has the testing requirements, substitution procedures, and warranty language that determine your actual scope. Most estimators don't open it until there's a dispute.

Addendums drop at the worst possible time

Friday afternoon, 48 hours before bid. Now you need to know exactly what changed and how it affects your number. That's a manual hunt through every affected sheet.

Upload once. Ask anything.

No setup. No training. No learning a new interface. Just your plans and a chat window.

1

Upload your plan set

Drop your PDF — architectural, structural, MEP, civil — all disciplines in one file or separate uploads. Foreman AI processes every sheet in 1–2 minutes.

2

Get an instant analysis

The system automatically surfaces conflicts between disciplines, incomplete details, and scope gaps — the things that become RFIs and change orders on every project.

3

Ask anything about your plans

Type a plain-English question. Get a specific answer, with the exact sheet reference — not a list of documents to go hunt through yourself.

Live example

What rebar size is specified for the continuous footing on grid line A?
The continuous footing at grid line A calls for (4) #5 bars continuous top and bottom with #3 stirrups at 12" o.c., per the footing schedule on sheet S-201. The concrete is specified at f'c = 4,000 psi per the General Structural Notes on S-001. S-201, S-001
Are there any conflicts between the architectural and mechanical drawings at the second floor?
Yes — two potential conflicts identified at the second floor: (1) The 24"×18" supply duct shown on M-201 runs through the area where the structural beam W12×50 is shown on S-102 at column line 4-B. Beam bottom chord is at 9'-4" AFF; duct bottom would be at 8'-11" with standard insulation. (2) The ceiling height noted as 10'-0" on A-202 conflicts with the 9'-6" clearance after the HVAC main trunk shown on M-104. M-201, S-102, A-202, M-104

Every role that touches a plan set.

Estimators

Stop reading. Start asking.

Front-load plan comprehension in the first hour of a bid. Know what's in there before you start counting.

General Contractors

Catch coordination gaps before they cost you

Run a full multi-discipline conflict check in minutes. Protect your margin before you're committed.

Project Managers

Answer owner and sub questions fast

When a sub asks a scope question, get them an answer backed by the actual drawings in 60 seconds.

Specialty Subs

Understand your scope without the full plan set review

Ask exactly what's relevant to your trade. MEP subs can dig into equipment specs and clearance requirements directly.

Start free. Scale when you need it.

No credit card required to upload your first plan set and start asking questions.

Starter
Free
forever

Try the tool with your own plan set. No commitment, no setup.

  • Upload & process plan sets
  • AI Q&A on your plans
  • Conflict detection
  • Limited plan sessions
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Team
$179
per month

For estimating departments and GC teams running concurrent bids.

  • Everything in Professional
  • Multiple users
  • Shared plan library
  • Team Q&A history
  • API access
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