A Bridge in Amsterdam, Seen From a Living Room in Dublin: How Tech from Bentley and Cesium Put Dutch Infrastructure Inside a Flat in Ireland
Standing in her home on a leafy Dublin street, Liana O’Cleirigh sees what anyone else would: a red-brown armchair, a desk, and a window view of a neatly trimmed front lawn and the occasional passerby. Then thereās the 3D model of the Earth, spinning above her rug. When she extends a hand, a virtual menu pops up in the Apple Vision Pro headset covering her eyes. With a pinch of her fingers, the Earth turns and zooms in toward Amsterdam, where a 3D bridge in the city’s east comes into focus. Another pinch and she’s standing on it, at her human scale, turning around and inspecting its pillars and cables. Then she reaches above her head, grabs the sun, and drags it across the sky, turning day into night. Such adventures are a job perk for O’Cleirigh. She works as a UX designer at Bentley Systems and closely collaborates with Bentley Labs. The view inside her headset is the latest project to emerge from Bentley Labsāan innovation hub her team likens to the “wild west” of extended reality, or XR. The project, tentatively called Labs XR Prototype, is a collaborative viewer utilizing Bentleyās iTwin platform. It lets up to five