Summary: Create a simplified model DXF with thermal zones, then convert it directly into an eQUEST-ready model with Bim2Sim.com—no second redraw required.
If you’ve ever started an eQUEST project, you know the drill: hours spent just getting the building geometry in place. Produce a usable CAD File. Then retrace the CAD file you produced in your software (eQUEST, EnergyPlus, OpenStudio, IES VE). Most modelers waste 5–20 hours retracing drawings before they can even run the first simulation. The geometry step should be simple. Instead, it’s often the single biggest roadblock to starting an energy model. Here’s why—and how to fix it.
Starting an energy model means defining zones, walls, windows, and shading surfaces. In eQUEST, that typically means drawing every line by hand. It’s no surprise users search for “how to start eQUEST project from scratch,” “why is eQUEST geometry so hard,” and “trace building floor plan for energy modeling.” Until recently, the answer was: yes, it’s hard—start tracing.
This is why people keep asking how to simplify CAD for energy modeling and whether there’s a faster way to create eQUEST geometry.
Instead of redrawing your simplified model DXF again in eQUEST, convert it directly into a simulation-ready model. That’s exactly what Bim2Sim does: you still create the model DXF with thermal zones, but rather than tracing it a second time, you upload the file and download an eQUEST-ready model.
No double work. No wasted hours.
Searches like “DXF file for building energy model” or “DXF import to EnergyPlus or eQUEST” exist for a reason: DXF is the common exchange format most architects and engineers can export. The key nuance is that the raw CAD DXF is too detailed; the model DXF—clean, simplified, and zoned—is the asset you want. With Bim2Sim, that model DXF is all you need.
Here’s the streamlined workflow:
You go from CAD to simulation-ready in a single step.
Energy modeling is about decisions, savings, and performance—not about drawing the same geometry twice. With Bim2Sim, you can cut 5–20 hours out of every project and start simulating faster.
Title: Convert Model DXF to eQUEST | Start Energy Models Faster
Description: Stop redrawing zones twice. Learn how to convert a model DXF (with thermal zones) directly into eQUEST using Bim2Sim. Save 5–20 hours per project.
URL Slug: /convert-model-dxf-to-equest
eQUEST, energy modeling, DXF to eQUEST, thermal zones, CAD workflow, Bim2Sim, building simulation
Bob Fassbender is the founder of Energy-Models.com and Fassbender Energy Advisory. A former Trane software engineer and instructor, Bob has more than 20 years of experience in energy modeling, building performance, utility incentives, and energy strategy. His work spans whole-building energy modeling, calibration, independent technical review, decarbonization planning, utility incentive strategy, renewable energy analysis, and owner advisory services. Bob has supported projects ranging from commercial buildings and utility programs to large-scale data center developments involving power infrastructure, geothermal systems, heat recovery, and long-term energy planning. Through Energy-Models.com, Bob has trained thousands of energy professionals in eQUEST, OpenStudio, EnergyPlus, LEED modeling, and building performance analysis. He continues to advise owners, engineers, architects, and developers on energy-related decisions while exploring emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence, machine learning, and advanced building analytics.
Energy-Models.com is a site for energy modelers, building simulators, architects, and engineers who want learn the basics, to advanced concepts of energy modeling. We've got online training courses and tutorials for eQUEST, Trane TRACE 700, OpenStudio, and LEED for energy modeling. All our energy modeling courses are video based. What better way to learn energy modeling software than screen-casts of exactly how things are done?
Copyright © 2010-2024 CosmoLogic LLC. TRACE 700 and eQUEST are ™ of Trane Inc. and James J. Hirsch respectively. Energy-Models.com is built in San Francisco, CA and Slinger, WI USA.