Hamburg is a distinct real estate market with its own planning topics, buyer expectations and architectural context. A strong 3D visualization for Hamburg has to explain more than form. It needs to show materiality, daylight, outdoor space, circulation, furnishing potential and the relationship between the building and its surroundings before photography or a show unit are available.
We create exterior renderings, interior visualizations, 3D floor plans, CGI tours and animations for developers, architects, agents and asset teams working in Hamburg. Depending on the project, the focus can be residential sales, office leasing, refurbishment, densification, mixed-use communication or investor presentation. The image set is planned around the real decision: a project website needs different views than a permit discussion, a leasing deck or a sales brochure.
We are based in Berlin and do not pretend to operate a local Hamburg office. Instead, we work with a transparent remote process: structured kickoff, careful review of plans and models, bundled feedback rounds and traceable approvals. Local context is handled through plans, photographs, maps, references and, where useful, on-site information. This keeps production efficient while still respecting the city-specific character of the project.
For marketing, we usually start with the most important hero perspective and then add supporting exterior views, interiors, 3D floor plans, staging variants or a CGI tour. For committees, authorities or neighborhood communication, the visual language can remain more factual and focus on massing, height, material and outdoor space. This creates images that are not just attractive, but useful in sales, planning and alignment.
In production, we start with the decision the image has to support. For Hamburg sales, this may be an emotional exterior view with street context, greenery and entrances; for an existing asset, it may be a clear interior with daylight and furnishing; for neighborhood communication, a calmer public-space view may be better. We define useful camera angles, confirmed materials and open variants before detailed modeling, so the image set stays consistent even when facades, landscape or specifications change.
Hamburg also depends on credible context. Water, brick, existing trees, courtyards and dense streets do not have to be reconstructed as a full documentary model, but they cannot feel arbitrary. We use site plans, photographs, map material and references to build a believable visual environment. Marketing images can be warmer and more active; approval or stakeholder images remain more factual.
The sequence of media also matters. For Hamburg, we often recommend clarifying exterior impact and urban context first, because these images define the project story. Interiors, 3D floor plans and detail views can follow. If a project has several audiences, the set can be split into a factual series for coordination, a warmer sales series and additional campaign images for websites, signage or investor material.