Freelancer tools

Internal automation across standalone, web, and CAD plugin surfaces.

A growing portfolio of internal tools that compress what would otherwise be hours of manual detailing work. We don’t sell them. We don’t license them. They exist to make the people who do the work faster, and to keep what we charge our clients honest.

StatusActive development.
SurfacesStandalone applications · Web tools · AutoCAD and Revit plugins
AudienceInternal use only.
SourcePrivate.
Three surfaces

Different problems live in different places. The tools we build go where the work is.

Surface 01

Standalone applications

For tasks that don’t fit inside someone else’s editor — batch operations, format conversions, plotters and previewers, generators that produce drawings from structured input. They run as their own apps, with their own UI, on the operator’s machine.

Surface 02

Web tools

For tasks that benefit from being shared, versioned, and reachable from anywhere. They live alongside MyBlitz or run as their own services, each with the same auth and audit posture as the rest of the platform.

Surface 03

AutoCAD and Revit plugins

For tasks that belong inside the operator’s existing tool. Plugins drop into AutoCAD or Revit and add the specific commands or panels that turn a 30-minute manual sequence into a single click.

Why this category exists

Detailing involves a lot of work that a human does perfectly well — and a lot of work that a human shouldn’t be doing in the first place. Repetitive geometry, file conversion, drawing generation from structured data, format normalization across projects. None of that requires judgment; all of it eats hours.

The tools in this category absorb that work. The result is freelancers who spend their time on the parts that need a person — the calls about scope, the design judgment, the review — and not on the parts that don’t.

Why these stay internal

Some of the tools could ship. Most of them solve problems specific enough to Blitz’s operating model that they would need substantial work to be useful elsewhere. Maintaining that work, supporting external users, and guarding against unintended uses would absorb the effort that currently goes into building the next tool.

For now, the tools live where they were built — inside Blitz. If a tool ever crosses the threshold where shipping it makes more sense than not, the page will list it.