I have a landscape-based point cloud that now needs to become a clean, well-structured AutoCAD file suitable for topographic mapping and further civil design work. I will need trees mapping in certain areas. Your task is to extract the terrain surface, major contour lines, breaklines, and any visible site features from the scan and lay them out in a clearly layered DWG that opens seamlessly in AutoCAD 2022 (or later). Because accuracy is critical, I’m looking for someone who has proven experience converting landscape point clouds into topo drawings—please reference similar projects you have handled and the typical point density or file sizes you’ve worked with. Key deliverables • One master DWG containing contours at an appropriate interval (let me know what the data supports) • Separate layers for ground, hardscape, vegetation/tree trunks, and any structures that appear in the scan , Where trees interact with tracks or playgrounds, the tree spread and height should be shown • The source surface (TIN or mesh) used to generate contours, provided as a separate file if created outside AutoCAD • A short text note summarising assumed coordinate system, vertical datum, and any areas of data voids or guesswork Acceptance criteria • Spot-check elevations from the DWG must match the original point cloud within ±20 mm. • File opens with no missing Xrefs, proxy objects, or unresolved point cloud links. If you’re confident with tools such as Autodesk Recap, Civil 3D, or CloudCompare and have a streamlined workflow for large LAS/LAZ datasets, I’d like to hear how you’ll approach this and your expected turnaround.