How it works

Structure that makes craft compound

Treillage works inside the tools your team already uses. The mechanism is reuse: the work you’ve already done, carried forward so it works for you on the next project.

  1. Capture what holds

    The standards, details, and decisions your practice has settled become structure — named, held, and ready to use, instead of living in one person’s memory.

  2. Reuse where the next project starts

    That structure is there at the start of the next project, so your team begins from what you already know works — not from a blank sheet.

  3. Compound over time

    Every project run through the lattice makes it more complete. The craft accrues into an asset the firm owns, and each season builds on the one before.

What it looks like in Revit

Treillage runs as an add-in inside Revit, where the work already happens. It never changes your model or sends data on its own — every read or write is one you asked for, in your session, and you can undo it.

Capture. When your team settles something worth keeping — a detail, a standard, a routine sequence of steps — you save it as a named, reusable skill, instead of letting it live in one person’s memory. Capturing is deliberate: you promote a proven one-off into the library, never automatically.

Vet. Your own drafts run immediately. Sharing a skill with your team is what’s gated — a shared skill goes through review and automated checks, and must carry its own self-test, before it joins the library everyone pulls from. So the structure your practice reuses is work you’ve chosen to trust.

Reuse. On the next project the skill is there to run where you start. You browse the library, see each skill’s review state at a glance, and read its full definition before you run it. You stay in control, and a one-click undo reverses a run.

Each project run through Treillage makes the lattice more complete. The craft accrues into an asset the firm owns.

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