ACPAtlantic Construction Podcast// HOSTED BY DANIEL ARSENAULT
HOME / EPISODES / EP 25
EP 25 · 2022-02-21 · 1:10:00

How Halifax's Luminous Labs Replaced Model Suites with 3D Virtual Tours (and Saves Developers Thousands)

Luminous Labs co-founders Nick LeBlanc and Greg Miles explain how game-engine 3D visualization is quietly displacing model suites and overseas render shops across Atlantic Canada's construction market.

The story, written up — a sharp read with every fact on the record. Or skip straight to the moments that matter, as clips.
Read the article ▸▶ Watch the 14 clips ▸Read the transcriptOpen on YouTube ↗
// CHAPTERS — TAP TO JUMP THE PLAYER
0:16Founder Origins and PivotNick's architect-father upbringing and gaming roots; Greg's abandoned CPA career in Calgary; how COVID gave them time to immerse in 3D software and pivot from a projection-mapping idea to architectural renders.6:00Services Deep Dive: Virtual Tours and Drone PanoramasHow the Margaretta and Canard Centre projects work end-to-end—360 panoramas, drone sphere integration, the 3D Vista analytics tier vs. Kuula free tier, and why 100+ panoramas per building beats the traditional 3–4 stills.14:30Software Stack: Blender, Unreal Engine 5, and LumionComparison of tools—Lumion as quick-and-dirty vs. Blender/Unreal for photorealism; Mandalorian 360-LED void as real-time rendering reference; GPU acceleration cutting render times from 15 hours to 10 minutes.23:20Revit Compatibility and Workflow EfficiencyHow Revit models allow 30–40% cost reductions; the workflow of blocking with floor-plan photos, building the shell, and elevating with high-poly assets; pre-built model library as competitive moat.30:50Business Case: Replacing Model Suites and Preventing MistakesVirtual tours vs. model suites—cost, vacancy revenue, salesperson overhead; the 'reading a book vs. watching a movie' analogy for aligned stakeholder vision; how one prevented material mistake pays for the entire render package.40:00Competition and Market PositionWhy Atlantic Canada renders were previously outsourced to Russia/China; economy-of-scale pricing model; 5,000-asset library advantage; local knowledge as differentiator; education YouTube channel building global network.50:00Future: Legislation, Metaverse, and Halifax BoomPossible regulatory mandate for photorealistic renders in permitting; NFT/metaverse adjacency; Halifax construction boom as tailwind; closing reflections on the multi-disciplinary skill set required.
// THE INTRO

Host Daniel Arsenault sits down with Nick LeBlanc (Dal architecture background, childhood gamer) and Greg Miles (abandoned a CPA career in Calgary) to unpack how Luminous Labs grew from a pandemic-era hobby into a full-service pre-construction visualization firm. The conversation covers their service stack—billboard stills, 360 virtual tours via 3D Vista and Kuula, Unreal Engine 5 walkthroughs, and drone panoramas—and why developers (not architects, as they originally assumed) became their biggest clients. They walk through real Halifax projects: The Margaretta (Smarter Spaces), The Canard Centre (Southwest Properties), and the Queen's Marque streetscape. Technical depth is high: ray tracing, Blender vs. Lumion vs. Unreal Engine, Revit compatibility, GPU acceleration, and their pre-built 5,000-asset model library. The business case is made concretely—virtual tours replace expensive model suites, prevent costly material mistakes, provide analytics on buyer behaviour, and can quote 30–40% lower when a Revit model is available. The episode ends with discussion of emerging metaverse/NFT adjacency and a future where legislation may mandate photorealistic renders as part of permitting.

// THE LESSONS
See all 12 lessons ▸
Pre-construction 3D virtual tours replace model suites at lower cost while eliminating the revenue drag of keeping a unit vacant.
the model suites that are traditionally done—you have to build them and then it's an empty space that's unoccupied, so that's revenue you could be getting
▶ Clip20:47
A single prevented material mistake—wrong colour or spec on a large building—can pay for the entire render package.
if you can catch one mistake in pre-construction and it saves you 20 grand then you pay yourself
▶ Clip21:22
Developers, not architects, have the largest appetite for full virtual-tour packages because the marketing ROI is immediate and measurable.
we just didn't really realize how much of an appetite that the developers would have for these full virtual tours
▶ Clip34:00
Having a client's Revit model in-hand allows render firms to quote 30–40% lower because modelling time is eliminated.
there are times where we can actually quote 30 to 40 percent of what we normally would because we have that revit model
▶ Clip50:16
Building a pre-built, organized 3D asset library before jobs arrive is the primary operational moat—it compresses per-unit turnaround by 5–10x versus ad-hoc sourcing.
I've spent hundreds of hours organizing our model library so that when it is actually go time to drop everything in then we are dropping in our finished asset
▶ Clip58:50
Outsourcing renders to overseas firms creates communication, time-zone, and language barriers that erode quality and margin; local firms with regional knowledge command a premium.
you run into the communication barrier the time difference… language barrier which is a huge one actually
▶ Clip33:10
Render analytics (where virtual-tour viewers spend time) give developers data-driven insight for marketing content prioritization.
75% of the time people are clicking on the gym so if we are creating some material maybe we should put three photos of the gym
▶ Clip15:13
Using drone panoramic spheres as window backgrounds in CG units is far more cost-effective and realistic than fully modelling the surrounding city—combine photography with 3D instead of replacing one with the other.
a photo is far more realistic than we could ever model… it uses almost no computer resources
11:19
GPU hardware improvements are exponential (doubling performance every two years); render-heavy businesses must budget for hardware upgrades as a core competitive investment, not a capital luxury.
what took you 15 hours to render still now takes us about 10 minutes—that's just in the last two years alone
▶ Clip37:45
COVID provided an asymmetric learning window: founders who used pandemic downtime for intensive skill development effectively compressed 3–4 years of normal learning into one year.
we were probably able to cram about three or four years of learning if we were working full-time into a year
▶ Clip5:34
Showing a developer two layout or material options via renders is almost always cheaper than committing to one option and regretting it—use visualization as a decision tool, not just a marketing asset.
any time that we are showing you options it's going to be quite a bit cheaper than if you just say I'm gonna go with this one and you end up not liking it
▶ Clip18:08
Photorealistic 3D rendering requires multidisciplinary competence—3D modelling, architectural photography, lighting, marketing, and construction knowledge—making it a high-barrier craft that resists commoditization.
you have to know a little bit of photography you have to know the 3d program you have to understand marketing construction real estate
▶ Clip26:39
// CLIPS FROM THIS EPISODE
All 12 lessons from this episode, on one page.
Sent to your inbox. The receipts included.
// FEATURED BUSINESSES
Luminous Labs Inc.

Halifax-based architectural visualization studio producing photorealistic 3D renders, 360-degree inter…

Full dossier · 1 project ▸
Southwest Properties

Halifax-based real estate developer, owner and operator of high-quality apartments, condominiums, reta…

Full dossier · 5 projects ▸
// FACT-CHECKED ✓ web-verified, with sources
✓ VERIFIED
GPU hardware improvements roughly double performance every two years; what took 15 hours to render now takes 10 minutes — just in the last two years.
The 'doubling every two years' framing maps directly to 'Huang's Law' (Jensen Huang's stated observation about GPU performance gains), which is publicly documented and widely cited. Nvidia's RTX 40 and 50 series have demonstrated 2x-4x generational performance jumps. The 15h to 10min specific figure…
SOURCE ▸
// COMPANIES & ORGS ✓ verified
Luminous LabsNick LeBlancGreg MilesSouthwest PropertiesSmarter SpacesCunard ResidencesThe MargarettaQueen's Marque
// PROJECTS NAMED
The Canard CentreThe MargarettaQueen's Marque
SOURCE: podscope · public episode data · fXIhB7Ow1-A