Thanks Krippahl.
🙂
As for becoming a specialist in Revit vs. ArchiCAD, My opinion is that it probably takes as much time in each. Both applications are very deep and sophisticated. (This is not to say that Revit is nearly as powerful or useful as ArchiCAD.)
I was hired by CUH2A because I was a specialist in ArchiCAD. When HDR purchased CUH2A, I was tasked with becoming a Revit specialist since HDR Architecture was in the middle of a 3-year transition from AutoCAD to Revit Architecture.
Having a deep understanding of BIM already was a big advantage in getting up to speed in Revit. But I am always learning new things in projects and weekly discussions with other specialists. I even had to get AutoCAD 2011 training so I could support our MEP Engineers. (BTW, AutoCAD has come a long way in the last few versions.)
But how long to become a specialist? I am not sure. Some may be able to do it in a couple years, in the right environment. Large firms should expect to support their top specialists doing 50 - 70% billable work and 30-50% overhead, depending on project workloads. I think at least three ingredients are:
1. The right person (a long topic)
2. Give that person time and high-level training to work things out that will pay-back in future productivity.
3. That person still needs plenty of time in the trenches with the team.
Ransom Ratcliff
RATCLIFF CONSULTING LLC
Charrette Venture Group
ArchiCAD 4.55 - 28
Apple M3 Max + Dell Precision Workstation