ArchiCAD and Residential?
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2004-12-02
04:06 AM
- last edited on
2025-01-30
11:02 AM
by
Molinda Prey
BTW, I’ve searched and have seen a few responses, but I’m more curious to hear your opinions now that version 9 is out.

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2004-12-04 06:54 AM
You have to ask the ArchiCAD guys about demoing their software.....does ArchiCAD have a fully functional 'trial' version so that TexasTechGrad can truely compare the two on his own side by side?
Autodesk, Inc.
On March 5, 2007 I joined Autodesk, Inc. as a Technical Specialist. Respectfully, I will no longer be actively participating in the Archicad-Talk fourms. Thank you for always allowing me to be a part of your community.

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2004-12-04 05:15 PM
Richard wrote:I have not heard that CA can handle something like Eureka Tower.Djordje wrote:Djordje - Other than the multi-user environment, what do you believe defines "class" in this case?
Also, you can not compare ArchiCAD and Revit with Chief Architect; if you compare, it shoudl be the same class of software.
Apologies if I am wrong.
ArchiCAD since 4.55 ... 1995
HP Omen

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2004-12-04 05:26 PM
Scott wrote:Sorry, Scott, but this is simply not true. The Autodesk deadlines ran one version back. Support? Back home, I drive a 1965 Beetle. Still can find parts for it.
The 'deadlines' are imposed by the age of the software. Autodesk cannot continue to support old software. If they had to, they would need to provide support back to 1.0.
Scott wrote:Quite callous. Especially if you are on the subscription scheme, which should be on a yearly basis the same as a full license plus upgrade.
The deadlines basically mean that Revit has moved on and dropped support for old software. You can continue to use it if you'd like, but when it comes time for you to move on, you will need to purchase the software outright again.
ArchiCAD since 4.55 ... 1995
HP Omen

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2004-12-04 06:25 PM
If you are on subscription, you continue to get updates....much like an extended warranty for the Beetle. Wouldn't it have been nice to pay a small amount a year on your car, for the life of your car, and continually get all service and maintenance for free? As it is now, you can still get parts....but they are fuill price.
Software is slightly different in that technology has changed too rapidly to continue to provide support for old versions. I don't think I could find anyone that would be able to help me with Bank Street Writer for my Apple IIc. Even now, if I wanted to run AutoCAD 9 off of my fourteen 5.25 floppies that I still have, I don't think I could find a 5.25 drive in a computer to put them in.
Autodesk, Inc.
On March 5, 2007 I joined Autodesk, Inc. as a Technical Specialist. Respectfully, I will no longer be actively participating in the Archicad-Talk fourms. Thank you for always allowing me to be a part of your community.

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2004-12-04 09:22 PM
Djordje wrote:Since there's been discussion, let me add:
you can not compare ArchiCAD and Revit with Chief Architect; if you compare, it shoudl be the same class of software.
There's three areas where not buying the best [usually, but not always, the most expensive] can cause disappointment:
-- photo manipulation
-- rendering
-- building modeling
software of different "classes" might seem pretty much the same out of the box, but once you invest countless hours of learning and adapting, you run into the impenetrable wall of "Can't-Do-That" and end up regretting an inexpensive choice that became a really expensive decision.
Strata falls into this category, less so Photoshop Elements - version 3 really coming along - and applications like chief architect that have abrupt limitations you don't find out about before it is "too late." Excuse the Sunday school/teen s*x theme.
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2004-12-05 02:06 AM
Will the product be a standard of the industry or not
Is it accepted and used by the Engineering community
It has engineering modules or not
Will it help me integrate in the corporate world?
What is the projected user base curve?
The decision is not unlikely as the one presented to the member of a minor foreign culture of what is the #1 Language one must learn.
I for one at the time I decided for Archicad I was sure it will conquer the marker, but I was wrong and it did not. Growing older I have realized that the success of the product has only marginally to do with its quality and a lot with its marketing and the greed of its management. I am sure Archicad had menu buy our offers from larger interest groups but it remained in hands that it may not have deep enough pockets to propel it in to the future.
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2004-12-11 08:28 AM
Adalbert wrote:A major consideration is what type of practice you picture your future in, or you would like to flow to in the future. The larger the practice, the larger the personnel dynamics, the larger the flow of CAD files with the outside world, the higher the costs of speaking a different language. The smaller the practice, the lower those costs and the higher the profits of maximizing productivity even if it is not the market leading program. (In say spreadsheets you don't have that dilemma: Excel is the absolute best, and it is also the standard.)
I for one at the time I decided for Archicad I was sure it will conquer the marker, but I was wrong and it did not.
If you have been using ArchiCAD all this time, Adalbert, you have payed less transition costs than if you had tried to keep up with every new release redesign of AutoCAD, Architectural Desktop, Revit. [I made a very painflul switch to AC in '00 after 8 years of Minicad/VectorWorks and I will never regret it. Today I am seeing the death of AutoCAD at the hands of Autodesk and history, so I am also glad about having had successfully avoided that awful tool even if it was the standard for so many years.]
There are lots of profits we all reap daily from using ArchiCAD, and in your case that must have outweighed the cons up to now --otherwise you would have switched programs.
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2004-12-11 04:49 PM
The best practice, in my opinion, is to use whatever works best for now and be prepared to change if circumstances dictate.
If ArchiCAD is no longer working for you, or there is another program that will serve you better, them perhaps it is time to switch.
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2004-12-11 05:58 PM
You are right as far as the past is concerned but at this point we have a competing software equal or close to be an equal with AC. Unfortunately this software is in the hands of the most powerful player in the field and it may very well become a standard, so the picture you projected is far from being an accurate one.
Mathew
You are correct “ The best practice, in my opinion, is to use whatever works best for now and be prepared to change if circumstances dictate.” This is what I am talking about the “change if circumstances”.

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2004-12-12 07:23 PM
Adalbert wrote:Don't think so. Not because of the software, be it ArchiCAD or Revit, but because of the nature of the industry. As long as the authorities want paper, and as long as not knowing how to send email, make a PDF, or scan something means that you are illiterate, it will not happen. No non-drafting software will be a standard.
Ignacio,
You are right as far as the past is concerned but at this point we have a competing software equal or close to be an equal with AC. Unfortunately this software is in the hands of the most powerful player in the field and it may very well become a standard, so the picture you projected is far from being an accurate one.
Speaking of the competitor - I personally see a huge problem in it, that is its main advantage. Yes, relationships. I suspect that one spends as much time controlling the relationships, breaking or redefining them, as one does the design. A submission or tender documentation set is a legal document. No, I don't trust myself enough, let alone a software, be it what it may! This is off topic a bit, but consider - in the residential practice, what is the implication of a, say, wall pulling half the house with it two feet out?
Adalbert wrote:Quite, quite true. What works for you best is the best. Some would not require more power than X, some would want Gehry's CATIA based app. The trick is to recognize the value that XYZ software returns to your practice.
You are correct “ The best practice, in my opinion, is to use whatever works best for now and be prepared to change if circumstances dictate.” This is what I am talking about the “change if circumstances”.
ArchiCAD since 4.55 ... 1995
HP Omen
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