InQI expands its property intelligence platform with new site plan editor, 3D modeling, and AI agent tools

InQI updated its property software to store and build on data tied to a specific address over time. The platform now includes 3D modeling, code review, cost estimates, and a multi-LLM system that cross-checks AI outputs.

Published on: May 06, 2026
InQI expands its property intelligence platform with new site plan editor, 3D modeling, and AI agent tools

InQI Repositions Property Software as Persistent Intelligence Platform

InQI launched a major platform update that shifts its core product from a site plan generator into what the company calls a property intelligence container - software anchored to a property address that accumulates data and context over time.

The Mountain View-based proptech platform, which serves architects, designers, builders, and homeowners, released five primary features alongside a roadmap extending through Q3 2026.

What's Available Now

Site Plan Editor v2.0 operates on high-resolution aerial imagery with a 16-layer system. Each layer can run in AI Recognition mode - using Nearmap detection - or manual Draw Mode, letting professionals choose between speed and creative control.

3D Modeling generates data-driven models from real terrain, parcel boundaries, and structure heights. The system includes sun, shadow, wind, and rain simulations built on actual site data rather than presentation rendering.

Three specialized AI agents are now generally available:

  • Codes.IQ - Reviews plans against jurisdiction-specific building codes and zoning requirements
  • Estimate.IQ - Performs quantity takeoffs and construction cost estimates using regional pricing data
  • InQuest - A conversational assistant with full project context awareness

Three-Tier Binder System creates persistent project context across account, project, and public levels. Designers' libraries, project documents, and reference materials feed directly into every workflow.

InQI Mobile captures field documentation on iOS and Android devices, automatically geo-tagging and indexing it within the project.

The platform uses Multi-LLM Consensus Architecture - comparing outputs across multiple AI models to surface discrepancies and provide trust signals that single-model systems cannot.

Coming This Quarter

ADU.IQ (early June) will specialize in Accessory Dwelling Unit workflows, addressing one of the fastest-growing residential construction segments.

Output Manager.IQ (mid-June to late July) will unify export functions to produce permit-ready packages.

Landscape.IQ (August-September) will bring AI-native outdoor design with vegetation detection, impervious surface coverage analysis, and water budgeting.

Ali Tehranchi, InQI's founder, said the site plan was always an entry point, not the final product. "We've spent two years building something the industry hasn't had - a place where everything tied to a property address lives, learns, and compounds in value over time," Tehranchi said.

InQI, founded in 2023, operates across all 50 U.S. states with particular adoption in California, Texas, Florida, Washington, and other markets with active ADU development.

For more information, visit inqi.ai.

Related: AI for Real Estate & Construction and AI Design Courses


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