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2009-11-19 09:56 PM
2009-11-20 02:24 AM
2009-11-20 05:35 PM
2009-11-20 08:55 PM
2009-11-23 10:07 PM
blobmeister wrote:I have to strongly disagree with your comment... I have worked for and with firms using ArchiCAD (6.0-13) that have accomplished design awards and magazine spreads with very complex designs. I have been working with ArchiCAD for the last 12+ years (before the BIM marketing avalanche from Autodesk) and never once was unable to accomplish a design (no matter how big or complex) in my tool of choice.
It all depends on what type of projects you do. It's that simple. If you're doing boxy traditional, not to complex buildings, that aren't too large, then both Revit and Archicad will do. Anything else, I would advice you to go with a combination of Rhino/ Maya and Autocad. Pretty much all firms that do interesting work and occasionally make the magazines will never touch software like Revit or Archicad, for the obvious reasons.
2009-11-23 11:29 PM
David wrote:Well, there is a reason why software packages like Rhino, Grasshopper, Maya are dominating this segment of the industry and not Archicad.blobmeister wrote:I have to strongly disagree with your comment... I have worked for and with firms using ArchiCAD (6.0-13) that have accomplished design awards and magazine spreads with very complex designs. I have been working with ArchiCAD for the last 12+ years (before the BIM marketing avalanche from Autodesk) and never once was unable to accomplish a design (no matter how big or complex) in my tool of choice.
It all depends on what type of projects you do. It's that simple. If you're doing boxy traditional, not to complex buildings, that aren't too large, then both Revit and Archicad will do. Anything else, I would advice you to go with a combination of Rhino/ Maya and Autocad. Pretty much all firms that do interesting work and occasionally make the magazines will never touch software like Revit or Archicad, for the obvious reasons.
2009-11-24 01:31 AM
Macbook Pro M1 Max 64GB ram, OS X 10.XX latest
another Moderator
2009-11-24 03:30 PM
blobmeister wrote:
It all depends on what type of projects you do. It's that simple. If you're doing boxy traditional, not to complex buildings, that aren't too large, then both Revit and Archicad will do. Anything else, I would advice you to go with a combination of Rhino/ Maya and Autocad. Pretty much all firms that do interesting work and occasionally make the magazines will never touch software like Revit or Archicad, for the obvious reasons.
However, if you want to use a BIM tool, regardless of the type of projects or architectural style, then Bentley is the perfect tool.
2009-11-24 04:49 PM
2009-11-24 05:30 PM
blobmeister wrote:
The firms who use Rhino or Maya use Autocad for documentation as it's still the most flexible and customizable tool available...........
Now, the term "magazine" architecture is purely to illustrate the type of architecture, not "necessarily the starchitect itself. We can all agree or disagree if this style or the way it is practice is good for the profession. What is odd though is that we all want Graphisoft (and Autodesk, for the those who use Revit) to be on the cutting egde of technology. We expect them to deliver us with the best they can, to us to keep us ahead of the competition. We are pioneers in BIM & IPD compared the 2d firms, yet we use it to "design"and document un-inspiring, un-innovative, traditional architecture that has been here for over a century. And we seem to critize the few that try to bring architecture to another level. And apparantly those working at Graphisoft think the same way too.
Would we be using an Iphone if Apple think the same we do in Architecture?