bg
News
10:11, 31 October 2025
views
10

St. Petersburg Students Are Learning Urban Planning With AI

95 Future Builders Are Using One of Russia’s First AI Platforms for Vocational Education

In St. Petersburg, 95 students at the College of Industry Technologies, Finance, and Law are studying urban planning through AI-powered generative design. The college is the first in Russia to adopt the rTIM platform — a domestic artificial intelligence system developed by Rocket Group — now being used to train specialists in information modeling in construction.

With rTIM, students can generate city development scenarios, visualize design concepts, assess economic indicators, and ensure their projects meet technical and regulatory standards. The platform helps them see how different parameters — such as building density or infrastructure layout — affect overall project outcomes in real time.

“Mastering the rTIM platform is a strategic decision,” said Andrey Savvateev, head of the Information Modeling in Construction department. “Our students consistently show strong results and win national competitions in BIM technology. We aim to train urban planners who can apply AI to solve real engineering and design challenges.”

The rTIM system serves as an AI co-designer — capable of modeling residential, commercial, and social infrastructure while automatically calculating key metrics. For students, it provides hands-on experience with the same AI tools reshaping the global construction industry.

“Integrating AI platforms into education is a major step for the field,” said Boris Latkin, CEO of Rocket Group. “Digital technologies and AI are becoming standard in design. Together with the college, we’re proving that education can keep pace with the industry and prepare the specialists of the future.”

The integration of generative design into the curriculum is part of the college’s strategy to advance digital competencies and educational independence. Alongside AI, the institution is developing tools in virtual and augmented reality and its own BIM-based systems — all aimed at equipping students with skills that match the demands of the modern construction sector.

like
heart
fun
wow
sad
angry
Latest news
Important
Recommended
previous
next