Modeling
About Archicad's design tools, element connections, modeling concepts, etc.

About The Architects' Journal (especially for the Brits)

In the issue of 15.09.05 of the ever-increasingly scrwd up The Architects' Journal, section 'Technical & Practice', a Joe Croser gives advice on BIM products disregarding ArchiCAD with the following words:

'As a 2D drafting tool ArchiCAD is much easier to use than (Autocad) LT for the drafting of 2D plans, sections and elevations, and is capable of producing sweet-looking drawings much faster, but in my opinion it lacks the 'I' in 'BIM' --ArchiCAD is not fully 'integrated'.
'My biggest gripe with ArchiCAD is that it is not possible to take any building model and extract true, coordinated 2D views of plans, when there are more than two floor levels visible in the plan. Yes, you can 'work around' this issue, but in doing so you lose the very coordination sought by an integrated solution and if George Scott (the guy who asked for advice) was happy struggling with workarounds he would be happier with his existing Autodesk LT.'

In my opinion, Mr. Joe Croser's fingers should be cut off for having typed such clueless stupidity. I felt like writing but thought that maybe a Brit reaction would have more of an effect.
15 REPLIES 15
Anonymous
Not applicable
to be fair , he is right!!
If you have more than one level in a single plan, then you cannot work as usual.
Look at the auditorium example posted by Petros Ioannou.
I think the article is reffereing to such examples.

Unfortunately Archicad is tighed to its roots, and the fixed floor plan approach is a very limitting one.
And whats more everything is turning around it. (show at the floor above, below,all stories).
In revit you have plan views as horizontal sections which is much more natural
TomWaltz
Participant
opinion it lacks the 'I' in 'BIM' --ArchiCAD is not fully 'integrated'
.... except that the "I" is for "information" not "integrated".

The plan/level thing is a pain, but not enough that I would slag the software for it.

Of note, you CAN do split level plans pretty easily, you just cannot mix and match then later.
Tom Waltz
Rob
Graphisoft
Graphisoft
I tend to agree with oreopoulos and I think that was what the article meant (so there is no need for any fingers surgery, Ignacio).
Like honestly we haven’t had so many problems with the visibility of library parts, walls etc.
Of note, you CAN do split level plans pretty easily, you just cannot mix and match then later.
this is actually the point in the article that talks about workarounds, because I do not consider current plan 'fudging' as the true BIM approach.
::rk
Rob wrote:
I tend to agree with oreopoulos and I think that was what the article meant (so there is no need for any fingers surgery, Ignacio)
The guy's message is 'ArchiCAD is a nice tool for 2D drafting, way better than LT, but because of this thing it is not integrated 3D, so don't go that way'!

The floor plans issue is an ultra-minor issue, relative to the whole of the 'BIM' modelling-presentation-calculation-documentation-file compatibility-workforce training/availability-etc. issues (and I would guess any program will have issues, including this guy's recommended Revit and Microstation), and this guy makes it the only BIM factor in the whole article. (And it is a minor issue in probably 2% of all projects: in my whole ArchiCAD life I've never had a project where my hands were tied because of that, including multi-building projects with split levels, sloped terrains, mismatching floor elevations and story heights, etc.).

The guy took a page to comment on 'BIM' in a technical magazine and that is the technical evaluation he comes up with! I would go for more extreme surgery.
Rob
Graphisoft
Graphisoft
Ignacio,
is there any chance to read that article electronically? or could you eventually scan that as a low res image and post it on?
::rk
Thomas Holm
Booster
TomWaltz wrote:
Of note, you CAN do split level plans pretty easily, you just cannot mix and match then later.
I don't see the problem? I realise you can't see it all at once in the working plan window in Archicad if you use separate stories for each level, but if you do it's no problem to create views that you integrate as you wish in Plotmaker? And with PM's current level of integration, what's the problem?
AC4.1-AC26SWE; MacOS13.5.1; MP5,1+MBP16,1
Rob
Graphisoft
Graphisoft
I don't see the problem? I realise you can't see it all at once in the working plan window in Archicad if you use separate stories for each level, but if you do it's no problem to create views that you integrate as you wish in Plotmaker? And with PM's current level of integration, what's the problem?
I am sorry Thomas, I just didn't get your point mate
Views integration in PM What do you mean?
::rk
Anonymous
Not applicable
Please find attached the pdf of the article.

Cam
Rob
Graphisoft
Graphisoft
cameronm wrote:
Please find attached the pdf of the article.

Cam
...and where is it attached?
::rk