Friday, July 6, 2012

TO PHASE OR NOT TO PHASE....

Many people have a problem with phases in Revit because they are so misunderstood.  What phase do I need to draw on?  Do I need to add new phases?  How do I use phase filters?  Do I use phases for alternate bids?  These questions and many more often confuse people.  So, here is a summary of phases: 

  • Ask yourself, do I have an existing building?  If so, phases are probably for you.  All of the existing building construction needs to be drawn in a view that is in an existing phase.  If not, things won't show up correctly on demolition and new construction drawings.
  • Do you have portions of a building that will be built at a later date?  If so... phases could be your best way to show this.
  • Alternate bids... if you have alternate bids you want to show as part of the project in an as-built or for construction set... then Design Options may be a better way to go.

Below is an image of how the phases in Revit (Existing and New Construction) can be filtered by view.  This may take some "fiddling" to get it to show what you want.  For New Construction plans, I typically use Show Previous + New and set the Phase to New Construction.  For Demolition plans, I typically use Show Previous + Demo and set the Phase to New Construction.  And of course if you add Phases, you'll have additional settings to consider.  Like a lot of things in Revit, phases are view dependent.  They aren't "graphic overrides" like some other items... think of them exactly as they are called... Phases.  If it something that is in an existing building... then it's Existing... not New Construction.  Here's how to show existing room names on demo views and not have them show up in your room finish schedule Existing Room Names.  

 

 

 

 

 

From Autodesk, here are the standard phase filters:

Each Revit Architecture project contains the following default phase filters:

 

  • Show All. Shows new elements (using the graphics settings defined for that category of elements) and existing, demolished, and temporary elements (using the Graphic Overrides settings for each phase defined using Manage tab--Manage Project panel--Phases--Graphic Overrides tab).
  • Show Demo + New. Shows demolished elements and all new elements added to the building model.
  • Show New. Shows all new elements added to the building model.
  • Show Previous + Demo. Shows existing elements and demolished elements.
  • Show Previous + New. Shows all original elements that were not demolished (Show Previous) and all new elements added to the building model (+ New).
  • Show Previous Phase. Shows all elements from the previous phase. In the first phase of a project, existing elements are new to that phase, so applying the Show Previous Phase filter causes no elements to be displayed.
NoteTo show all elements from all phases, do not apply a phase filter to the view.
Phase Status:

Each view can show one or more phases of the construction. You can specify different graphic overrides for each phase status.

  • New. Element was created in the phase of the current view.
  • Existing. Element was created in an earlier phase and continues to exist in the current phase.
  • Demolished. Element was created in an earlier phase and demolished in the current phase.
  • Temporary. Element was created and demolished during the current phase.

Alternate Bids

If you have alternate bids you want to show as incorporated into a project at some point, you may want to use Design Options.  It's an easy, 1-click change to make one of the alternate design options current.  Here's a good link to read more about Design Options.  If you don't want to use Design Options, keep in mind that rooms and room tags are phase dependent as well and this could cause problems.  If you do place alternate bids on a separate Phase, you can always use a shortcut and Combine With Next or Combine with Previous from the Phase Dialogue Box.  This will alow you to place all of the content that was on the alternate bid phase onto the New Construction phase.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Using Phases in Revit takes a little bit of planning at the beginning of the project.  If you plan ahead and have a good understanding of how the project will be built, then Phases should be a very useful tool!

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Revit 2013 Updates

Thought I would pass this along... the most exciting of all these is that they are finally starting to fix the stairs.  May not be all the way there yet, but at least it's a start!

 

http://autodesk-revit.blogspot.com/2012/03/what-new-in-autodesk-revit-2013.html

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

GRAPHIC STRUCTURAL DESIGN PROCESS

Thought this was a great graphical representation of design process from a structural standpoint:

 

 

Thanks to: ArchDaily

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

EXISTING ROOM NAMES ON DEMO VIEWS

This is another quick little trick for putting existing room names onto a demolition plan.  Because of how the Phase Filters work in Revit, you can’t get existing room names to show up on a demolition plan… it automatically defaults to show the new construction rooms.  So here’s what we’ve done:

  1. Duplicate the Existing Floor Plan view for each floor plan and call it “FIRST FLOOR PLAN – ROOM NAMES” as an example…
  2. Set the PHASE FILTER for the view to SHOW ALL and the Phase to EXISTING.
  3. Under VISIBILITY GRAPHICS, turn everything off except for ROOMS (under Model Categories) and ROOM TAGS (under Annotation Categories).
  4. This will create a view that has just the room names as seen below:

Now… here’s the trick.  You are going to put this view “on top” of your normal demolition plan view on your plan sheet.  You may have to do a little bit of aligning before you turn everything off in visibility graphics to make sure that the correct room is in the right space.  This is what you end up with.  The image below is a "demolition plan" view with a "room names" view on top of it on the sheet.  The draw back is that if you want to move a room tag... you need to do it in the sheet view to make sure it doesn't overlap any keynote, dimension, etc.

WARNING!!!    When you’re all done with this and you want to edit your view from the sheet… make sure to click on the correct view.  Since these 2 views are essentially on top of each other, you may click one and not realize it.  Also, make sure you duplicate your view when doing this… otherwise you’ll end up with views where you want the walls and floors and doors on and all you’ve got is room names.

MAKE IT EASIER TO SEE DEMO WORK

 

This is a little trick that I've used when I have a lot of demolition keyed notes to put on a drawing.  It's hard sometimes to differentiate between the new walls and the existing walls.  After a while it all starts to look like the same mess of black walls/toilets/doors/etc.  Here's a quick way to help you get thru that.  Turn all of the demo items to RED.  

 

 

 

 

It's easy to do...

  1. Go to the MANAGE TAB and click on PHASES at the far right.
  2. On the menu that opens up, click on the GRAPHIC OVERIDES TAB.
  3. Then for both Demolished Projection/Surface Lines and Cut Lines... click on the little box that has the dashed line in it.
  4. CHANGE THE COLOR TO RED FOR BOTH LINE TYPES. 
  5. This will make all the demolished items in your plans red and easier to see.

 

WARNING!!!  Make sure to go back and change these BACK TO BLACK BEFORE YOU PRINT.  These red lines don't print to pdf well and wouldn't show up on printed sets very well.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Autodesk Cloud Rendering : Revit Rendering made simple and fast!

To start, download the Autodesk Cloud Rendering Add-In for Revit 2012 which can be accessed upon logging in at Autodesk's Cloud Rendering webpage:

http://rendering.cloud.autodesk.com

Once installed, open the project you would like to render out of, and click the Online ribbon button. From there, you will find the option to "Render in Cloud," select this.


Find the view you would like to render and modify the limited selection of options as necessary.


The upload, surprisingly, takes less than a minute before Autodesk's cloud computers get to work. You can monitor the progress by going back to the Autodesk's Cloud Rendering Webpage.

http://rendering.cloud.autodesk.com/mygallery.aspx

After what had initially taken 36 hours on our dedicated rendering computer was done in less than 2 hours.


Self illuminated materials will not render nor will RPC objects that were not part of the Revit release.

From what I understand, Cloud Rendering is only available to Autodesk Design Suite Subscription based customers and there may, or may not, be a limit on how many renderings each license is good for.

I should also note that I had turned on all of the lights in the project for the cloud rendering, alternatively, for the internal rendering I did, I only had a limited selection of lights on. Crazy.

There is also an option to do a panoramic rendering which I am looking forward to trying out next..

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

For all you i-padders and i-phoners out there...

 

Autodesk Design Review is now available for the i-phone, i-pad and i-pod touch.

http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/design-review-mobile/id459112753?mt=8&ls=1