In this tutorial, we'll explore advanced scene management techniques in SketchUp Pro, focusing on how to create and organize scenes for efficient layer control, view management, and style switching. Building on concepts from our SKP 101 course, we'll develop a professional workflow that streamlines your modeling and presentation process.

Let's begin by cleaning up our Scene tab workspace. Currently, we have true north axes and project north axes scenes that served their purpose during the initial modeling phase. These navigational aids are valuable during construction, but they now occupy precious real estate in our scene management bar. To maintain an organized workflow, select both scenes and delete them using the minus button. This housekeeping step ensures your scene bar remains focused on presentation-ready views.

The foundation of efficient SketchUp workflow starts with creating a dedicated working style scene. This scene prioritizes performance and clarity over visual polish, enabling faster navigation and editing. Create a new scene and configure the properties carefully: disable camera location saving to maintain navigation flexibility, enable visible tags and active section plans for comprehensive model control, and include style and fog settings for consistent visual feedback. However, exclude shadow settings—these should be reserved for specific presentation views where lighting plays a crucial role.

Rename this scene "Working Style" and exclude it from animations to prevent interference with presentation sequences. Now customize the visual properties: access the Styles panel and disable profiles to reduce visual clutter and improve performance. Navigate to the Tags panel and disable plants and trees—these complex geometries can significantly impact navigation speed during intensive modeling sessions. Update both the style and scene to lock in these optimization settings.

Next, establish a dedicated export scene that addresses SketchUp's unique rendering characteristics. When exporting images, SketchUp processes line weights differently than screen display, often resulting in thinner lines than expected. Create a new scene called "Export" and enable profiles in the Styles panel, setting depth cue values to 2 and 2 for optimal line weight translation. In the scene properties, uncheck everything except style and fog to ensure these visual elements remain consistent across exports while allowing camera flexibility.

With your foundational scenes established, it's time to create presentation-ready camera views. Start by developing a comprehensive "Final" scene that showcases your complete design intent. This scene should include all visual elements—enable trees and plants in the Tags panel to display the full landscape design. This creates a toggle system where "Working Style" provides clean editing views while "Final" presents the complete design vision.


Now we'll establish specific camera positions for various presentation needs. Position your view to capture an compelling exterior perspective—perhaps showcasing the relationship between architecture and landscape elements. Look for compositions that demonstrate scale through human figures and highlight design features effectively. Right-click in the scene area and select "Add" to create a new scene based on current settings, then modify the properties to save only camera location and shadow settings while including it in animation sequences. Name this "Exterior View 1" for clear organization.

Your scene management system now provides powerful workflow control: "Working Style" optimizes performance, "Final" shows complete design intent, "Export" ensures proper line weights, and "Exterior View 1" captures a key presentation angle. This systematic approach scales efficiently as you add more views.

Continue building your presentation suite with an aerial perspective that provides contextual overview. Navigate to an elevated position that reveals site planning and architectural massing relationships. Use the same "Add" workflow, ensuring only camera location and shadow settings are preserved. Name this "Exterior View 2" to maintain your numbering system.

For a more intimate architectural perspective, create a view parallel to key spaces like plazas or courtyards. Adjust the field of view to approximately 55 degrees for natural perspective that avoids wide-angle distortion. If specific landscape elements obstruct your composition, enter the model group and hide individual trees or plants—this level of control allows precise scene composition. When adding this view, enable "show hidden objects" to preserve these visibility states within the scene. Name this "Exterior View 3."

Remember that hidden geometry states are preserved per scene, requiring careful management. If you hide elements in one view, you'll need to restore them in others using Edit > Unhide Last, then update those scenes with the appropriate visibility settings. This granular control enables different landscape configurations for various presentation needs.


Develop additional perspectives by exploring different vantage points around your model. Create a view that emphasizes the relationship between built and natural environments, positioning the camera to include foreground landscaping while maintaining clear architectural views. Use the right-click menu to move and rename scenes for optimal organization.

For your final exterior view, establish a lower perspective that creates a more human-scaled experience. Set the field of view to 55 degrees for natural proportions and ensure proper vertical alignment using Camera > Two-Point Perspective. This maintains architectural accuracy while providing an engaging viewpoint.

Complete your scene setup by reviewing each view systematically. Verify that camera angles create compelling compositions, adjust field of view for optimal perspective relationships, and confirm that Two-Point Perspective maintains vertical accuracy in architectural views. Update each scene to lock in these refinements, then save your file to preserve this comprehensive scene management system.

This methodical approach to scene creation establishes a professional workflow that separates working efficiency from presentation quality, enabling rapid iteration during design development while maintaining presentation-ready views for client communication and project documentation.