Collaboration with other software
About model and data exchange with 3rd party solutions: Revit, Solibri, dRofus, Bluebeam, structural analysis solutions, and IFC, BCF and DXF/DWG-based exchange, etc.

Revit Structural, is it gaining ground? Read the article

Anonymous
Not applicable
Hi,
GS please read this article, are we lost in the structural front?

http://redigitaleditions.com/ActiveMagazine/getBook.asp?Path=BDC/2009/01/03&BookCollection=BDC&Reade...

Click on BIM Software

I think a translator from IFC to CIS/2 would gain us some ground.
Thanks,
Joseph
20 REPLIES 20
Erika Epstein
Booster
I've had a number of successful exchanges with both Revit MEP and Revit Structural. This has been with several different firms and projects. I typically give and receive both IFC and 3D DWGs as the latter are much smaller files.
Navisworks uses the 3D DWG format.
Solibri uses IFC.
Erika
Architect, Consultant
MacBook Pro Retina, 15-inch Yosemite 2.8 GHz Intel Core i7 16 GB 1600 MHz DDR3
Mac OSX 10.11.1
AC5-18
Onuma System

"Implementing Successful Building Information Modeling"
Anonymous
Not applicable
In Sweden we have something like LOU (I think we have it in the rest of EU too). It's about when a government or similiar want to build or buy something, than you can't say no to a contractor, consultant, product because of for in this example, his software. Because of this, you can't said that a project must use .dwg as fileformat if not all consultant could use this. You must use a fileformat that everyone could use if you need the consultant to cooperate in digital way.
I'm not exactly sure about how this law works, but similiar to above. And because of this, if Autodesk want to have their products competing, they can't live their own life, they must work together with all other software in one way or another. And if Autodesk want to lockout all other, I guess USA government will have a chat with Autodesk too, like they have with Microsoft.

English words in a Swedish way too talk, I hope you understand though. Or else, Mats Knutsson @ Graphisoft Sweden could explain to you.

Djordje
Virtuoso
Harry,
Harry wrote:
Our New York Studio is now fully BIM with Revit, not because it is 'better' than AC but because of their engineers also use Revit/Struct/MEP. Our management wants a roll out of Revit across all studio's - 1000 seats- not least because of the Autodesk pricing incentives (a modest charge over current Autocad licences).

However there is some resistance- see my post in AC/Revit Competition. Would like to know how well AC can work with Revit/S/MEP using IFC etc - so far have heard it works ok but our IT team currently assessing.

It would be a huge blow to Graphisoft if we went down the Revit path as in Australia we have a very large user/knowledge base
Just by chance, I know that your company is very cautious. I knew a few people in your deceased Dubai office who were rather unhappy about being safely on 11, when 12 is months old etc.

If I were your IT, I would look at interoperability rather than the labels and marketing talk. Do the structural guys do the calculations and the dimensioning of the structural members in Revit? I don't think so.

As long as your IFCs match all is well. Being on the same software does NOT guarantee interoperability. Funnily enough, being on different software and having to think about the interoperability issues creates a much easier transfer of data.

Bottom line, which software it is does not matter. How you exchange data does. Having the same brand does not mean that the files will fly.
Djordje



ArchiCAD since 4.55 ... 1995
HP Omen
Anonymous
Not applicable
Hi Djordje-

good to hear from you and that you have survived the recent melt down in Dubai. Our Dubai office is not deceased but has been downsized because of projects put on hold but we still have a sizable presence there and ongoing work.

I think the engineers would not do the calculations in Revit but would do dims etc. Yes it is frustrating being on v11 when v12 has been out for some time. Ironically this caution is based on bad experiences with Autocad upgrades in the past. Sadly the firm I was with before in Abu Dhabi (also Aussie based HQ) has chosen Revit as it's BIM platform (they had a number of AC seats up to then). I think our 'cautious' IT guys will resist a roll out of Revit at least until they have had a good look at ACv13 and sees what it has to offer. Our NY Studio does have some concerns with Revit in very large projects - major upgrade to hardware required etc. As you know, no project in ME is small with an average size being 150,000 sqm built up area
Mats_Knutsson
Advisor
Harry wrote:
Our New York Studio is now fully BIM with Revit, not because it is 'better' than AC but because of their engineers also use Revit/Struct/MEP. Our management wants a roll out of Revit across all studio's - 1000 seats- not least because of the Autodesk pricing incentives (a modest charge over current Autocad licences).
Harry,
Is it so!? How do they count? The long term maintenance cost makes the initial cost for entering BIM pretty uninteresting in my opinion.
/Mats
AC 25 SWE Full

HP Zbook Fury 15,6 G8. 32 GB RAM. Nvidia RTX A3000.
Djordje
Virtuoso
Harry wrote:
Hi Djordje-

good to hear from you and that you have survived the recent melt down in Dubai. Our Dubai office is not deceased but has been downsized because of projects put on hold but we still have a sizable presence there and ongoing work.
I am not in the business of fake ... oops, artificial islands and so on, that's why it is easier to survive. Yes, the meltdown is palpable. No further comments ... except that I did not know that there are so many words for losing your job in English, whichever version of it you speak. You learn something new here every day! The other day I have learned that 80 percent is 20 percent ... yes, you have guessed it, depends on the base value 😉
Harry wrote:
I think the engineers would not do the calculations in Revit but would do dims etc. Yes it is frustrating being on v11 when v12 has been out for some time. Ironically this caution is based on bad experiences with Autocad upgrades in the past. Sadly the firm I was with before in Abu Dhabi (also Aussie based HQ) has chosen Revit as it's BIM platform (they had a number of AC seats up to then). I think our 'cautious' IT guys will resist a roll out of Revit at least until they have had a good look at ACv13 and sees what it has to offer. Our NY Studio does have some concerns with Revit in very large projects - major upgrade to hardware required etc. As you know, no project in ME is small with an average size being 150,000 sqm built up area
Your firm is in dangerous waters, as your IT guys are deciding the professional softwar rollouts. It's like Lance Armstrong advising Ferrari. Racing, yes, but what kind? All the arguments that you have put here prove that your IT guys don't have the vaguest idea of the design software or the differences between one and the other. Horror ...

And you want to do Revit Structural for dimensioning ?!??!?! Have you guys heard of Teamwork and ArchiCAD? Core only display? Hm?

Let me give you a good advice: there is an Australian, goes by the name of Link. Hire him to teach your IT guys, and the management BTW, and sort your worldwide software problems.

Enjoy the sunshine, and belated congrats on the National Day!
Djordje



ArchiCAD since 4.55 ... 1995
HP Omen
Anonymous
Not applicable
Your firm is in dangerous waters, as your IT guys are deciding the professional softwar rollouts. It's like Lance Armstrong advising Ferrari. Racing, yes, but what kind? All the arguments that you have put here prove that your IT guys don't have the vaguest idea of the design software or the differences between one and the other. Horror ...
Well said Djordje
Totally Agree
Been There
Said That
Didn't Stop it Happening
All About $$$$$$$$


Anonymous
Not applicable
Our IT guys, in Australia anyway, are qualified architects and use the software as it should be used. The Archicad templates thet set up are excellent and as said some large projects have been designed and documented using it. But part of their job is to assess ALL software and so have been looking at Revit, Generative Components, Digital Project etc. NY is Revit because the team are familiar with it and have used it for a number of large projects when with a Very Large Firm. Ultimately it will be a management decision based on what IT recommends and so far IT Aus still have a preference for AC. Only NY is 100% BIM so far and I suspect most other studio's will introduce BIM (AC or Revit) slowly on a project by project base but still keep a large % AutoCad user base - hence the tempting Autodesk financial carrot.

I have started a project in Revit and am impressed- I am nowhere near as quick as in AC but as a designer it has a good modelling set- if I am pushed into a corner I will use it but otherwise I will stick with AC as I still prefer the controll I have on the output
Anonymous
Not applicable
I don't know if any of you are aware of the fact that Autodesk just aquired Robobat, the company that markets Robot Millennium (Autodesk Robot Structural 2009 now) which is an excellent structural analysis package that has excellent integration with Revit. This is not good news for Archicad.
Anonymous
Not applicable
Mark wrote:
I don't know if any of you are aware of the fact that Autodesk just aquired Robobat, the company that markets Robot Millennium (Autodesk Robot Structural 2009 now) which is an excellent structural analysis package that has excellent integration with Revit. This is not good news for Archicad.
They keep buying, buying and again buying, are not they shooting themselves in the foot by spreading themselves too thin or GS getting phased out?
Joseph