By searching on the forum I didn't find the answer to my question, I take the liberty of opening a topic
I should point out that I have already made 3D houses on SW for fun but I was wondering if a 3D model and then 2D plans made under SW could be admissible for a building permit application and it doesn't matter the answer (yes/no): why?
I have already applied for a building permit for an extension designed in Solidworks and I have not had any problems, it is not the software that is studied but the file, which can even be made on the drawing board as long as all the necessary information is in the file (https://permis-de-construire.ooreka.fr/comprendre/dossier-de-permis-de-construire).
I used it for the modeling of my terrace as well as my future wall for a request for work and I had no problem but I received the DWG plan of the land by an acquaintance who works with a surveyor to be sure of what I am doing...
To tell the truth, I would like to help several people around me who want to apply for building permits. Trained as an industrial designer, I master SW quite well (especially in mechanical design) thanks to my job and don't really want or have the time to learn how to use Sketchup... that's why I was asking if it was feasible via SW.. On the other hand, do you have any methods or techniques to recommend to me for the different steps? How do I take the part seen in section / profile of the land ?, the part inserting the project into its environment (apart from inserting an image in "background image" I don't see...)?
I was also confronted with these concerns a few years ago, I have to tell you that the people who examine building permits are not designers in precision mechanics, so you can afford to cheat on some views.
For the section view / terrain profile part I simply added trades manually in the drawing on a side view.
The most painful thing is the temporary insertion, in my case this is what I did, - I took a picture of the environment - I put some very bright colors on my 3D (Green screen style in the cinema) and I oriented my view my 3D so that it seems to stick to the photo, then I saved it in PNG (image without background). I repeated this step several times before I found the right angle. - Then I gathered (as best I could) the images on GIMP (a free photoshop) and I replaced the 3D substitution colors with photo issues to be the most realistic.
I only made requests for work. (extension, window opening, fence).
For the "situation" view, I imported a 3D google map view, and superimposed my SW room.
For the cross-sectional view, dxf (without texture) works. And put the dimensions, especially in relation to "the neighborhoods".
A piece of advice, do something very "rude". (crappy color, no texture ...). For my extension, the town hall thought that I had already done the work, the mayor came to check the condition, and I took a soap. It's hard for some to go digital...
Spend time on the planning rules (this was my bedside book for a month).