BeeGraphy Takes the Spotlight on the Prototype & See Podcast
BeeGraphy co-founder, Lernik Mirzakhanyan, recently sat down with James Murphy of HLH Rapid on the Prototype and See podcast to explore how parametric design and cloud-based collaboration are changing the way engineers, designers and manufacturers approach product development.
“The trend is changing from serial manufacturing to custom manufacturing.” – Lernik Mirzakhanyan
For decades, engineering and manufacturing workflows have been built around static CAD files. A designer creates a model, files are passed between teams, revisions are manually communicated, and every iteration can create another cycle of updates, approvals and version control challenges.
The familiar “final draft”, “final_v2”, and “final_final” workflow highlights a wider challenge: maintaining design intent as products move from concept through engineering and into manufacturing.
As manufacturing shifts towards greater customisation, additive manufacturing and low volume manufacturing, engineers need workflows that can adapt. Instead of treating a product as a fixed geometry, parametric design allows teams to define the rules behind the product — creating systems that can generate, modify, and optimise designs faster.
“We turn a product into a set of rules, not a single file.”
Having experienced these challenges firsthand as engineers, the BeeGraphy team set out to rethink how products are designed, shared, and developed — creating a cloud-based parametric platform that connects design logic, collaboration, and manufacturing workflows in a single environment.
In this episode, Lernik discusses:
- The limitations of traditional CAD-based workflows
- The challenges of building a parametric design platform
- How cloud collaboration can improve design-to-manufacturing workflows
- The future role of AI and automation in engineering design
Watch the full episode via the link below to explore Lernik’s perspective on the future of parametric modeling.
Full Episode: https://youtu.be/y5xTfe9_ax4
