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2008-05-27
06:37 PM
- last edited on
2023-05-26
11:31 AM
by
Rubia Torres
2008-05-27 07:15 PM
Kurt wrote:You place them into a piece of a wall identical to the width of the door or the window.
How do I place a door or window on a demo layer that I can turn off.
I need to turn them off and infill with new wall but can't figure out how to turn them off.
Thanks.....
2008-05-28 08:12 AM
2008-05-28 03:04 PM
Kurt wrote:Kurt:
How do I place a door or window on a demo layer that I can turn off.
I need to turn them off and infill with new wall but can't figure out how to turn them off.
2008-05-29 04:46 PM
David wrote:Yikes! I guess that's one way...Kurt wrote:Kurt:
How do I place a door or window on a demo layer that I can turn off.
I need to turn them off and infill with new wall but can't figure out how to turn them off.
To remove an existing door or window from an existing wall, this is my approach:
1. Change the line type of the door/window to dashed.
2. Explode the door/window, it will become lines and arcs (grouped) and an empty opening.
3. Place a fill of the new wall type over the opening and Bring to Front (so it is on top of the wall in Display Order).
4. Select the lines and arcs and move to the Demo layer using the Edit Selection Set... command (so the lines and arcs get moved at once).
5. Select the empty opening and delete.
These do not need to be done individually, any number of doors or windows can be selected and the majority of these operations and be performed on them as a group.
You should add a Signature to your Profile (click the Profile button near the top of this page) with your ArchiCAD version and operating system (see mine for an example) for more accurate help in this forum.
David
2008-05-30 03:14 PM
Laura wrote:The method I described will work for any door or window. In my practice I deal with many different door types (swing, french, bi-fold, sliding, etc), with a variety of wall thicknesses and frame dimensions, the method I use picks all these up automatically. Also, I need to show the new construction, not just the demolition. I can see where a part like this could make sense in a more limited context.
Yikes! I guess that's one way...
We just use a "dummy" 2D object for demo doors (attached) in existing walls to remain.
2008-06-07 08:10 AM
David wrote:Sorry, I go with option no. 1!Laura wrote:The method I described will work for any door or window. In my practice I deal with many different door types (swing, french, bi-fold, sliding, etc), with a variety of wall thicknesses and frame dimensions, the method I use picks all these up automatically. Also, I need to show the new construction, not just the demolition. I can see where a part like this could make sense in a more limited context.
Yikes! I guess that's one way...
We just use a "dummy" 2D object for demo doors (attached) in existing walls to remain.
David