Dwg - 3.0
Today, the industry is whispering about a new threshold: .
The engineer of 2030 won't draw a line; they will define an intent . The contractor won't measure a PDF; they will query a model . The building won't be handed over as a stack of prints; it will be handed over as a —a living digital record that breathes alongside the concrete and steel. dwg 3.0
DWG 3.0 will likely open DWG 2.0 files (automatic up-conversion), but saving a DWG 3.0 file back to DWG 2018 format will strip all intelligence. It becomes "dumb" vector geometry again. Today, the industry is whispering about a new threshold:
Autodesk has hinted that the true power of DWG 3.0 will only be accessible via their cloud platform (Forma/BIM 360). If you want the "Git-like" versioning and AI search, you must pay a subscription. You can't just buy a perpetual license and save a .dwg to a USB drive anymore. Part 5: DWG 3.0 vs. The Alternatives (IFC, DXF, STEP) Critics ask: Why do we need another DWG? Why not just use openBIM (IFC 5.0)? The building won't be handed over as a
For over four decades, the .dwg file format has been the unquestioned king of the AEC (Architecture, Engineering, and Construction) world. It started as a simple, proprietary binary file for a desktop program called AutoCAD (Release 1.0 in 1982). If that original format were DWG 1.0 , it represented the "Digitization of Paper"—taking a drafting board and making it a screen.
The evolution to (circa late 1990s/2000s) brought us into the age of "Files and Folders." It added 3D solids, complex linetypes, and external references (Xrefs). It was powerful, but it was still a file—static, heavy, and prone to version battles.
DWG 3.0 is not just an incremental version bump from Autodesk. It is a conceptual paradigm shift. It represents the death of the file and the birth of the living data set . In the era of cloud, AI, and Digital Twins, DWG 3.0 is the bridge that connects legacy drawings to the future of autonomous construction.