SketchUp turns 20 years old!
Although SketchUp has just turned 20 years old, you would never know it! SketchUp is constantly evolving to stay at the forefront of technology and feel fresh and new (whilst maintaining the features that everyone knows and loves).
With the move to subscription in 2020 the evolution of SketchUp has become even stronger – averaging 2-4 major updates per year!
1999
On a sunny day in Boulder, Co, architectural engineer Brad Schell, approached software developer, Joe Esch, with several years worth of handwritten notes he’d compiled around his ideas for a progressive 3D modeling software.At this time, architectural firms typically had only one or two trained CAD designers on staff as the software options at the time were difficult to learn. The need was clear, and it became Schell’s passion project to make 3D modeling accessible to everyone.Knowing the hardest part of getting people to adopt a 3D software was actually getting them up to speed in 3D, he knew the question he needed to answer: How could you bypass coordinate systems, offsets, and right hand rules and allow people to directly engage with the design?
The first early notes of what would become SketchUp.
Schell knew people could easily draw sketches of their ideas to successfully convey the complicated process of visualizing a 3D snapshot on 2D paper. Could it be possible to create a software that enables users to draw in 2D and then ‘pull’ into the 3D world? Fortunately Esch was looking for a new business idea, and Schell had just the thing.
Talk about timing. Just like that, the development of eSketch, the foundation of SketchUp, began.
With a streamlined interface, SketchUp was able to connect the designer directly with the design, removing any potential impediment posed by the software. Thus, the software democratized design, making it possible for anyone to create and communicate a 3D idea.
2000
SketchUp, from @Last software, formally launched on August 24, 2000. With a growing team, SketchUp was named one of the Best New Products at the A/E/C Systems Fall Show in 2001. And the buzz around this unique 3D software company out of Boulder, continued following the AIA national convention in Denver.
SketchUp sales team member Tom Wyman at the AIA Expo 2002 in Charlotte, NC
As SketchUp gained ground, the diversity of uses and people using the product were impressive. Professional designers from industries such as film and stage, game development, GIS, construction, interior design, landscape, and mechanical design were working in the software alongside architects, showing the wide range of creativity SketchUp supports.
As the community grew, so did the creative experimentation and integration with other tools. Notably, SketchUp engineers worked to put models into Keyhole, digital mapping software that eventually became Google Earth.
With the development of a SketchUp Google Earth Plugin, the conversation started, and soon there were plans for a partnership. SketchUp would be Google’s official modeler and a free version would be offered on their website. It didn’t take long to see that an acquisition made more sense…