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Autodesk Revit Architecture 2010 & 2011 & 2013 Certified Professional, Autodesk AutoCAD 2013 Certified Professional, Autodesk 3ds Max Design 2011 Certified Associate

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Phases

Filter Name
New
Existing
Demolished
Temporary
Show All
By Category
Overridden
Overridden
Overridden
Show Complete
By Category
By Category
Not Displayed
Not Displayed
Show Demo + New
By Category
Not Displayed
Overridden
Overridden
Show New
By Category
Not Displayed
Not Displayed
Not Displayed
Show Previous + Demo
Not Displayed
Overridden
Overridden
Not Displayed
Show Previous + New
By Category
Overridden
Not Displayed
Not Displayed
Show Previous Phase
Not Displayed
Overridden
Not Displayed
Not Displayed


Generally it's not a good idea to mess around with these.  Set them for the view and then leave them alone.  If you need to adjust your Filter Name you would be better off creating a separate view.  Ideally there would be first floor plan (set to Show Previous + New).  If you would need to switch the filter, then it would be best to create another view, such as first floor demo plan (set to Show Previous + Demo).  Or First Floor Plan - Existing (set to Show Previous Phase).  Changing the phasing on the fly back and forth usually ends up with someone leaving something set wrong.  My recommendation is to setup separate views in the beginning and then never mess with them. 

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Duplicating Views

Options for Duplicating View

Duplicate
Creates a view that is a copy of the primary view.  A duplicate view displays model elements but not annotation elements from the original view.
Duplicate with Detailing
Create a view that inherits all details of the primary view.  A duplicate with detailing view displays both model and annotation elements from the original view.
Duplicate as a Dependent
Creates a view that inherits view properties and view-specific elements from the primary view.  In a dependent view, you should only show a specific area of the view.  You can insert Matchlines to indicate where the view is split, and view references to link views.  This option helps to create views that show portions of a plan when the entire plan is too large to fit on a drawing sheet.

 Chart copied from "Learning Revit Architecture 2010"
Creating separate views (Duplicate or Duplicate with Detailing) for a different area of a view is not recommended.  Please use the Duplicate as a Dependent for all views that will be broken out with match lines.
General naming conventions are:
                FIRST FLOOR PLAN
                                FIRST FLOOR PLAN - AREA A
                                FIRST FLOOR PLAN - AREA B
                                FIRST FLOOR PLAN - AREA C

Friday, February 4, 2011

View Templates

Simple put a collection of visual settings for a specific view.  For instance, if you have several section views that need changes done to the view scale, discipline, detail level, specific filter applied and/or visibility settings, a view template will be very handy.  Simply go into one section, change the scale, update the detail level and turn on/off whatever you want.  You can now create a view template with all of those settings preset.  Then apply that view template to your other sections and everything will update at once.  This will help with overall consistency throughout your project.  View templates work very well for all views.  If you spend a lot of time in "Visibility Graphics" adjusting things, you may want to consider view templates. 
                View templates are available as a split-button under the "View Tab", "Graphics" panel.  There are four options here.  "Apply View Template", "Apply Default Template to Current View", "Create View Template from View" and "View Template Settings".  I think the first three options are self explanatory.  The last option "View Template Settings" is for making changes to existing view templates or manually creating new ones without being in an actual view.  For whatever reason, it seems that making changes to an existing view template does not update any view that has already had that template applied.  In this case you will need to reapply that view template to all of the views again, even though it is still listed as the default view template. 

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Quick and easy reception desks!

Creating reception desks have proven to be quite time consuming.  More recently I have found that creating a couple different profiles of some standard desks has been very handy.  Simply starting an in place family and creating a couple sweep extrusions, will help you build a reception desk in a few minutes.  Straight and even curved countertops can be created with one simple sweep.  You can also get creative with void forms and cut in some reveals or even an ADA counter approach.