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Tex Kelly Productions
Wood-framed construction interior with exposed rough-in, the stage where progress documentation pays off (photo via Matterport partner materials)

For General Contractors

Document the build before the drywall hides it.

Recurring 3D scans through construction give you a dated, measurable record of the work in place, especially MEP and framing before it gets closed in. It protects you on disputes, reports progress to the owner without another meeting, and rolls straight into a clean closeout.

Why GCs run it

One scan a week saves the fight later.

  • MEP before drywall

    Scan the walls open and every pipe, conduit, and rough-in is documented forever. When someone needs to cut in later, they know what is back there before the saw comes out.

  • Dispute protection

    A dated, measurable record of what was in place on a given day. When a claim comes up over what was built or when, the scan settles it instead of a he-said argument.

  • Owner reporting

    Send the owner a walk-through link they open in a browser. Progress they can see and measure themselves, without another site meeting on the calendar.

  • Closeout package

    A full set of dated captures becomes part of the as-built handover. The owner gets a facility record, and you get a cleaner closeout with less back-and-forth.

How it runs

You set the rhythm. I show up and scan.

  • 01

    Set the cadence

    We agree on a scan rhythm for the job, weekly, biweekly, or tied to milestones like pre-drywall and pre-ceiling. You tell me the schedule, I show up.

  • 02

    Scan the work in place

    Each visit captures the interior as it stands that day, fast and without slowing the trades. Most floors take a couple of hours.

  • 03

    Dated record, same week

    Each capture posts as its own dated 3D twin. Compare visits over time, measure anything, and share the link with the owner, architect, or your own team.

Walk a real capture

This is what a capture looks like.

A real commercial space captured by Tex Kelly Productions on the Matterport Pro3. Every visit posts as its own dated model like this one, navigable and measurable in the browser.

Common questions

Progress documentation, answered.

  • When in the build should we scan?
    The highest-value scan is right before drywall, with MEP and framing exposed. That single capture pays for itself the first time anyone needs to know what is behind a wall. From there, a scan every week or two, or tied to milestones, builds a full dated timeline through to closeout.
  • Will it slow my crews down?
    No. The Pro3 captures a space quickly and I work around the trades, not through them. A typical floor is a couple of hours and does not stop anyone from working. We schedule visits when they fit your day.
  • What does the owner actually get?
    A browser link to a navigable 3D twin for each dated visit. No app, no software. They can walk the site, take measurements, and see progress themselves. At closeout, the set of captures becomes part of the as-built handover, plus point clouds and floor plans on request.
  • Is this a subscription or per-visit?
    Either. Most GCs run it as a recurring cadence for the length of an active job, priced per visit or as a job package. Send the project size and timeline and we scope it. Rates are set per project, ask for a quote.

Get started

Have a job going up right now? Set a scan cadence.

Tell me the project, the size, and the schedule. We set a scan rhythm that fits the build, starting with the pre-drywall capture. Quote back within 24 hours.

Call Get a Quote