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2008-05-19 12:58 PM - last edited on 2024-05-03 12:02 PM by Aruzhan Ilaikova
2008-07-02 05:25 PM
greenfin wrote:oreopoulos wrote:oh. that's very strange indeed. curtain walls have been around for decades and we (europeans, as well as the rest of the world) have been designing buildings with curtain walls all the time so how do archicad users get around this limitation?
Υou will not find storefront windows in international version of Archicad, only in the US.
2008-07-02 08:04 PM
Dennis wrote:My grandfather used a horse to move around towns. It did the job. I wonder why we have those stupid things called cars and guess what you are paying to buy them. I guess you did your job before pc era. So i dont see your point. You dont see the goal. To totally have in control of the whole building process.
I've never had the curtainwall and storefront in AutoCAD the last 15 years I've been using it. Not even a regular simple wall tool. I did work on skyscrapers with it though.
Dennis wrote:AC is evolving slower than any other competitive program. The problem is they think that if they develop fast enough then they might reach a position that users will not need more functions (a ripe product) and they wont upgrade.
I think AC as with all other tools, is evolving, and becoming more and more complete. It is changing the way we document buildings, few steps at a time.
2008-07-02 10:06 PM
2008-07-04 10:30 AM
Dennis wrote:yes. it could be done with a pen and paper napkin as well. the point is, archicad is a BIM software and if you have to 'fake' curtain walls by detailing it in 2D then that defeats the whole purpose of BIM.
I've never had the curtainwall and storefront in AutoCAD the last 15 years I've been using it. Not even a regular simple wall tool. I did work on skyscrapers with it though.
Dennis wrote:i think a curtain wall is a basic wall type, even more than the composites and can't understand why archicad doesn't have it already. and now with AC12 only the US version will have it?! revit has had it for, i don't know how long, ever since i'd been using it at least. so i took it for granted that archicad would have it, too. if graphisoft wants to keep its market lead (they're still leading, aren't they?) they'll have to step up development.
I think AC as with all other tools, is evolving, and becoming more and more complete. It is changing the way we document buildings, few steps at a time. Even with V12, there won't be a specific automatic tool to do a lot of things, but that's life. I'm surewecan figure out how to get the necessary information to the client / contractor.
2008-07-04 10:36 AM
greenfin wrote:no no no!
... and now with AC12 only the US version will have it?!
2008-07-04 10:42 AM
oreopoulos wrote:it would be sad if it were the case. archicad is (one of?) the pioneer(s) of BIM and a european company. we don't need autodesk to have the monopoly on BIM as well.
AC is evolving slower than any other competitive program. The problem is they think that if they develop fast enough then they might reach a position that users will not need more functions (a ripe product) and they wont upgrade.
oreopoulos wrote:maybe so but buildings would not have changed so much.
I am 1000% certain that this cannot be the case. The product is so far away from letting you describe the whole building and when it reaches that goal, computers would be so advanced that we would have much different needs.
2008-07-04 10:46 AM
greenfin wrote:there are 'curtain wall' objects and window elements in the default library - try a search when you are in a library element browser.
oh. that's very strange indeed. curtain walls have been around for decades and we (europeans, as well as the rest of the world) have been designing buildings with curtain walls all the time so how do archicad users get around this limitation?
2008-07-04 11:08 AM
~/archiben wrote:yes, i have found them and tried them. my problem with them is that they don't 'act' like walls, meaning they need a host (wall) to be placed.
there are 'curtain wall' objects and window elements in the default library - try a search when you are in a library element browser.
you have two options: using curtain wall 'objects' or curtain wall 'windows'. the first is simply placed in the model as is, the second is placed using the window tool and will form its own wall hole.
when i used to work with curtain walling i chose the former - it ultimately gave me more control over the model. and building the 'hole' in a wall for a curtain wall is actually closer to how the 1:1 model is built as opposed to a standard window or door.
2008-07-07 11:45 AM
2008-07-07 12:14 PM
greenfin wrote:Set 2 different layer combinations, 1 for your plan view and 1 for what you want to show in 3D.
how do you hide elements in a given view?
/.......
2008-07-12 04:06 PM
2008-07-12 05:48 PM
Macbook Pro M1 Max 64GB ram, OS X 10.XX latest
another Moderator
2008-07-13 02:03 AM
greenfin wrote:The old way was to select the roof in plan and command/ctrl click a node on the roof and type or paste in the desired height.
What I'd like is for the two roofs to meet at the peak (bottom picture).
2008-07-14 11:37 AM
ejrolon wrote:that's what i was trying to do if by editing you mean moving the nodes around. not only does it entail a lot of work (at least 6 nodes to move for one roof surface), it wreaked havoc on the roof geometry.
Any reason why editing the roof polygon is not an option?
ejrolon wrote:
Select Roof
right click -> select and activate
move the nodes to create the peak__
You might/might not have to edit the Z coordinate.
Matthew wrote:i wish it were that simple. in archicad creating is a walk in the park but you have to get everything right the first time because editing is like climbing mount everest. in revit you can be as lazy and sketchy in creating because editing is so easy and straightforward anyone without prior knowledge of revit (with some basic drafting skills) can do it.
The old way was to select the roof in plan and command/ctrl click a node on the roof and type or paste in the desired height.
Now you can just do it in the 3D window by selecting the roof and dragging the point down to snap to the peak of the other one. You just need to select the right button on the pet palette.
2008-07-14 02:04 PM
greenfin wrote:greenfin:
if you mean changing the settings, i tried that but you can't change the slope of the individual parts in a polyroof it seems.
2008-07-15 12:09 PM
2008-07-15 01:04 PM
2008-07-15 03:36 PM
greenfin wrote:
while on the subject of roofs, i would just like to confirm if:
1. you can't trim a roof to another roof?
2. you can only trim walls that actually intersect a roof? e.g. a wall 3m high cannot be trimmed to a roof whose base is at 4m?
3. if yes to 2, you have to raise the height of the wall so it intersects the highest part of the roof before you can trim it?
4. you can't pick which roof to trim your walls to?
5. after trimming a wall to a roof, you make changes in the roof's height/slope/configuration, you have to re-trim the wall to the 'new' roof?
6. in revit, you can 'attach' your walls to a roof so that the walls' configuration (height, shape) automatically adjusts to any changes later made to the roof. can you do something similar in archicad?
TomWaltz wrote:why indeed? sorry, revit-speak. there's only one command for trim/extend in revit and it only says trim on the icon, thus my use of the word 'trim' to mean both trim and extend.
1) yes, you can
2) why would a 4 meter high roof trim a 3 meter high wall? If you want to extend the wall, yes, you can.
TomWaltz wrote:i've read the section on roofs before posing my questions. some things are not covered in manuals/guides and even when they are they are not always clearcut and some problems can't simply be foreseen. that's why these forums exist, right?
Most of these are in the Archicad user manual.
2008-07-17 12:07 PM
TomWaltz wrote:all my questions were actually about the 'trim to roof' command. i got too involved with it, i ignored other options.
5) it depends on which trim command you use. If you use "Trim to Roof" (which allows all of the above to work), then no. If you use Solid Element Operations (which does not allow all of the above to work) then yes.
David wrote:thanks. the group was suspended when i worked on the polyroof. i understand that 'alt + G' is a temporary suspend command so shouldn't the polyroof automatically revert back to its original grouping?
Make sure to Suspend Groups, Polyroofs are grouped by default.
2008-07-18 02:22 PM
2008-07-18 07:46 PM