2006-03-02 07:50 PM
2006-03-19 08:14 AM
2006-03-19 08:56 AM
Don wrote:There are basically two reasons for this.
I much prefer working in elevation and can't understand why there is such inconsistancy between 3D, elevation and section views.
Just because we see buildings in 3D doesn't mean that it makes it the best (or in the case of AC, the only complete way) to do all of your design.
There a lot of things that are done "better" in 3D only because they can't be done in 2D. Why should we be forced to workin only one way?
Don Lee
2006-03-20 07:00 PM
Don wrote:Elevation and section are conventions, not physical views. The only way to check your desing IN REALITY is to work in 3D. Unless you are designing drawings, not buildings.
I much prefer working in elevation and can't understand why there is such inconsistancy between 3D, elevation and section views.
Don wrote:Of course not. But, as I said, I believe that we should design the buildings first, and do the documentation of them later.
Just because we see buildings in 3D doesn't mean that it makes it the best (or in the case of AC, the only complete way) to do all of your design.
2006-03-21 05:24 AM
Djordje wrote:I (and I believe many others) prefer to work in elevation because it allows me to see and establish accurately the relationships between forms. Of course I use perspective views to check and verify these relationships as they may be seen on site, but for a building of any size, elevations are much easier to use (for me) as a design tool.Don wrote:Elevation and section are conventions, not physical views. The only way to check your desing IN REALITY is to work in 3D. Unless you are designing drawings, not buildings.
I much prefer working in elevation and can't understand why there is such inconsistancy between 3D, elevation and section views.
Don wrote:Of course not. But, as I said, I believe that we should design the buildings first, and do the documentation of them later.
Just because we see buildings in 3D doesn't mean that it makes it the best (or in the case of AC, the only complete way) to do all of your design.
2006-03-22 03:57 AM
Don wrote:Me too
I started drawing years ago with a T-square and have been using ArchiCad since 4.5
Don wrote:Regretfully true. That is exactly why software should be as invisible as the pencil - one should think about WHAT, not HOW. In software terms, that is ease of use, simplicity and uncluttered interface.
At the risk of offending anyone's CAD sensibilities, I have found that the computer has not made for better design students. Better graphics and presentations maybe, but not better conceptual thinking.
Many students have lost the ability to think and sketch. The computer can makes things too real, too soon. Shade, shadow and thousands of colors only camouflage the fact that the design often has no concept.
This incidentally, is a concern shared by many professors I know.
Don wrote:Yep, this is the danger. Too much too soon. That is also why SketchUp made it - not "serious" enough to be limiting, open enough to be anything.
I couldn't find it, but someone had stated very eloquently in this forum that "a line that is hand drawn has the potential to become many things, but that a cad line is simply a line". I think I might have mangled the original author's words, but hopefully the thought comes across.
Don wrote:My condolences ... I still have hopes for my daughter, as she is almost 11, but she likes to draw too much and designs doll houses in ArchiCAD ... chills my spine.
As a side note, much to the dismay of my wife and I, my son has (against our wishes) decided that a profitable future as an orthodontist is not for him and that he wants to be an.....architect. He is in his first year in school and well, loving it and kicking butt. We still have hope for our daughter.
2006-03-25 03:09 AM
Djordje wrote:Maybe it's inherited? Now if she could get her father to make a real doll house from her drawings! Just don't let her go crazy with the rain gutter object......
[My condolences ... I still have hopes for my daughter, as she is almost 11, but she likes to draw too much and designs doll houses in ArchiCAD ... chills my spine.
2006-03-27 01:42 AM
Don wrote:I'm going totally off-subject here but it's Sunday so it's allowed: the lack of conceptual thinking quality or quantity never had anything to do with the illustration quality or quantity, be it rendered or photoshopped or pencil or gouache. And the problem with pupils (and first of all teachers, because pupils follow their teachers' rewards) focusing on illustration instead of thinking has been around since the times of the École des Beaux Arts.
At the risk of offending anyone's CAD sensibilities, I have found that the computer has not made for better design students. Better graphics and presentations maybe, but not better conceptual thinking.
2006-03-27 08:55 AM
Ignacio wrote:.
Well used, the computer increases productivity. If one is producing cr*p, one now has the power to produce a lot more cr*p. It is not the computer that should be blamed though.