2005-12-20 06:21 PM
2005-12-20 08:11 PM
marcholt wrote:Select One Roof Edge and then, ctrl-click the edge of the other roof.
... but then get stuck with trying to find their intersections. I can eyeball in 3-d where they are, but I want to do it accurately.
marcholt wrote:I think there are a few different "schools-of-thought" on this one. I am of the school that places roofs on the story that the Bearing walls are on. If the roof seat cut of the roof is 9'-0" above that story height then that is where it is placed, likewise for the other roofs. No point in having a separate story (IMO) for the roofs.
...
On this note, Joe Holt posted a question about stories, and where they start and stop, and what to include. Continuing this theme, if I were to put this roof on a new story, where would it be recommended that the story start and stop, since there are varying roof plates and roof heights? Thanks for your help.
-Marc
www.holtdesignstudios.com
2005-12-20 08:52 PM
2005-12-20 11:52 PM
Jay wrote:Not necessarily a "school", but rather something I have tried recently, with reasonable results, is to have a roof storey at the same elevation as the aforementioned bearing walls (i.e. 0' elevation above top floor) then roof can still have relevant height setout (e.g. 9'), and you can add miscellaneous bits of wall such as gables, odd returns and the like, and they don't display on the floor plan below. This also means that all walls on the top storey can stop at the 9' height and you don't have to worry about extending them and then trimming to roof / SEOing.
I think there are a few different "schools-of-thought" on this one. I am of the school that places roofs on the story that the Bearing walls are on. If the roof seat cut of the roof is 9'-0" above that story height then that is where it is placed, likewise for the other roofs. No point in having a separate story (IMO) for the roofs.
2005-12-21 12:38 AM